gia He armers
dl
By TOM LINDER
ver thought that all former
were destroyed because man
earth? It is literally true
d troys the earth and also
own Civilization in the very
eating food under modern
future of our country and
is bound up in this very
fact. World Peace is im-
ong as we do not find an an-
erefore, Abe sincerely hope that
ry reader of the Bulletin
efully what is said in this
ee how mans stomach is the
rth destruction. Let us follow
us take any tract of land
t produces food for man.
what has happened. to that
i
et ee land was created by
ature over a very long period
It was enriched with certain
yf nitrogen, phosphorus and
In addition, it was given certain
minerals, trace elements and
ements essential for the life of
n . and lives of animals and men,
gh the ages vegetations of many
nd finally the giant trees of the
on this land. Each of them
ortion of the plant foods, min-
out of the land to create their
ies. In the course of centuries,
ached its life span and died.
ourse of time, it decayed and
the plant foods, minerals, etc.,
ch tree had taken from the land
rned to the land. Its form
. At the-end of their life cycles
Their carcasses decayed and
ad received back every ounce of
ods and minerals which had been
ve life to the animals and rep-
ore centuries man appeared.
he lived as close to nature as
hemselves. He lived on the
ng the forest trees. He ate
al meat, fish and fowl.
rs man himself re-
eserve it for future refer-.
aS mple corn field logic that
a tract of lend as.an ex-
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1952
ieay had sued went back to the
earth which had provided it in the first
place.
Thus we read in the beginning of the
Holy Word where God said to Adam,
For dust thou art, and unto dust shalt
thou return.
SO-CALLED CIVILIZATION
In the course of more-centuries, man
began to lift his little head and imagine
great things. He said let us build a
tower which shall reach into heaven.
He built the first city known as Bable.
From that time on he built many cities
and larger and larger cities.
As soon as men began to congregate
in cities, they began to destroy the earth.
When men live in cities, they bring their
food from the country. The wheat, the
corn, the meat and all items of food are
brought in ever increasing amounts from
the land to supply the hungry mouths of
the city population. All of these prod-
ucts are filled with plant foods, minerals
and other elements which they have tak-
en from the soil on which they grew. In-
stead of dying, decaying and returning
to the soil what they have taken away
rivers to the sea.
ao ne
NUMBER 18
Destroying The Earth |
from it, eee will transport to the oe
and the soil each year is depleted of a
part of the essential elements with which
it was endowed by nature.
When the corn, the wheat, the meat,
etc., are carried to, the cities to be con-
sumed or wasted instead of being return-
ed to the land from which they came,
they go down the sewer and down the
They go into modern
plants of destruction where they are com-
pletely destroyed or wasted. Therefore,
every year the land is further impov-
erished.in, order to feed the populaiiens
of the cities.
In ancient times it required a long
time to deplete the soil. They knew
nothing of commercial fertilizers and the
crop which the land produced each year
was limited by the amount of plant food
which nature made available in the soil.
Modern man, with his scientific in-
vestigations, as discovered bv the use ~
of commercial fertilizers nitrogen, potash.
-and acid, he can increase the yield of
crops several times.
There is an old saying A little learn-
ae on Page Eight)
Whole Food For Whole Life
oi following letter written by
Mr. Arnold P. Yerkes, who has done a
great deal of work as Director of Farm
Research and who knows what he is talk-
ing about, will be of interest to everyone
who is interested in the health and well-
being of the people of our country:
If you are one of those who are inter-
ested, read Mr. Yerkes two letters, one to
myself and one to Mr. Albert E. Winger
of the American Magazine. Both of these
letters are with regard to the program
we have initiated in Georgia for more
natural food and for taking out of pro-
cessed food deleterious and harmful mat-
ter dangerous to the health of the people.
These letters show that our efforts in this
direction are receiving National recogni-
tion. \
"985 Vine Street
Winnetka, Illinois
: January 5, 1952
Honorable Tom Linder
Agricultural Commissioner, State of Ga.
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Linder:
Last Wednesday I had lunch with Dr.
John J. Miller and showed him a copy of
enclosed letter to Chairman of the Board
_ of American Magazine.
I told him I was going to send you
a copy, which he approved, and said to
be sure to ask you to have my name plac-
ed on your mailing list to receive your
_ Market Bulletinalso, to ask you to have
the last three or four issues ae to me
for they were wonderful, and to ba
sure to tell you so.
If copies are still available, I certain-
ly will appreciate receiving them: other-
wise I'll put the heat on Dr. Miller to
dig them out of his files and lend them
to me, but I'd much rather have my own
for I shall make good use of them by
showing them or quoting them where
they will do the most good.
You may also be interested in the en-
closed copy of letter to Mr. Wm. E. Bohn,
Editor, The New Leader, suggesting he
might run a story on your program, as
well as commenting on an article he ran
by James Rorty which commented most
unfavorably on the Food & Drug Ad-
ministration. :
It would seem reasonable to believe
the rash of articles sponsored by the
Food & Drug Administration which has
broken out in the last month or so may
be a very direct result of fever brought
on by your program, not only among
Food & Drug Administration officials
but the top officials of the drug cartel.
I know one of the big units of the cartel
circulated a news item from the New
York Times of December I1th, 1951, and
doubtless others did also. It had the
following heading: Panel Denies Peril
in Food ChemicalsResearch Council
Study Calls Protests on Bread Additives
and Fertilizers UnfoundedPesticides
Termed VitalProper use of DDT De-
fendedGroup Finds Health Value of
Products is Rising.
Soon as I get time, Im going to write
to the Vice President of the company
making chemicals, who sent it to me,
who I have known for several years as
(Continued on Page Seven) -
PAGE FWO
MARKET BULLETIN
on the
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
Address all items for publication and all requests to be put
of address to STATE BU-
at ie and for change
REAU OF KETS, 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta.
es
RLAL
1
La ae esd
Notices of farm produce and
under postage regulations inserted
and repeated only when request is
of notice.
appurtenances admissable
one time on each request
accompained by new copy
Limited space will not permit insertion of notices contain-
ing more than 35 to 40 words, not including name and address
Bulletin, nor for any transaction
notices,
Tom Linder, Commissioner
Published Weekly at
114-122 Pace St. Covington, Ga.
By Depariment of Agriculture
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau ot
Markets, 222 State Capitol,
Atlanta, Ga,
Entered as second class matte:
August 1, 1937 at the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia, under Act
of June 6, 1900. Accepted for
mailing at special rate of postage
provided for in Section 1103. Act
Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market* Bulletin does
not assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
resulting from published
of October 8, 1917.
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
Executive Office, State Capito)
Editorial and Executive Offices
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
Wednesday. a anuary.
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY WANTED
cultivators, planters,
bottom plows 12 in. on rubber,
set peanut plows, used very
41. V. H. Burke, Ashburn, Rt.
a8
Allis-Chalmers C_ Tractor,
used 3 yrs., with planters, cul-
tivator, disc plow, disc har-
row, $1200. Odis Johnson, Sum-
merville, Rt.-1.
Piedmont 2 H wagon, prac-
tically new, $100. or exch. for
cow. R. M. Rosser, Covington,
Rt-5,
Farmall A tractor, _ starter,
lights, power lift, 2 row culti-
vators, planters, distributors,
extra good condition; $900.00.
Exch. for reg. Guernsey bull
or milch cow as part payment.
Phone 2967. S. E. Booker, Jr.,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 4, Box 261.
Model B Allis-Chalmers trac-
tor, lights, starter, good rub-
ber, good cond., power mower,
set cultivators, bargain, $700.
F. R. Lowe, Warrenton.
White Cloud Myers 400 gal.
Peach Sprayer, pump just over-
hauled, 200 lb. pressure, on
rubber. J. R. Hill, Greenville.
10 Electric-Two Element
brooders, good cond., for sale.
Phone 106. E. H. McMichael,
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
1948 Farmall Super A trac-
tor with 2 row planters, culti-
vators, fertilizer attachment,
harrow, plow, weeder, rubber
tired wagon, good condition,
$1500. J. S. Wellborn, Byron,
5 miles Byron, Hwy. 42.
10-20 McCormick Deering
Tractor on rubber, belt pulley,
$150.00; Oliver 2 disc plow,
g00d shape, $50.00; 8-20 in.
disc B. B. harrow, 800 lbs,
$100. 4 mi. NE Rockmart, FOB
my place. L. W. Spinks, Rock-
mart, Rt. 1.
One Farmall M tractor, good
eond., on good rubber, cultiva-
tors, planters, bush and bog
harrow, $2000. Wade H. Frank-
lin, Midville.
One Burpee Aristocrat Pres-
sure Canner, holds seven qts.
or 1/2 gal. jars, used very lit-
tle, $10. Plus postage. No COD.
Phone 5804. Mrs. Neil Bohan-
non, Covington, R. F. D. 4.
Avery tractor, 4 disc tiller,
dbl. sec. harrow, complete set
planters, cultivating equip-
ment, roller bearing 2 H or
tractor wagon, 2 H Avery
mowing machine on rubber,
theap. Phone 6455. J. D. Black,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 3.
Allis-Chalmers W. C. tractor,
cultivators, planters, distribu-
tors, peanut plows, starter,
lights, complete outfit, 28 disc
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
H Farmall Tractor, planters,
cultivators, complete; R-22 Intl.
Combine, J. D. 4 Disc Plow,
Intl. 6 ft. Tandem Harrow, 9
ft. Case Tandem Harrow, all
Ist class condition. Come see.
Phone 60. B! R. Walker, Ro-
berta. ;
50 gal. tank Orchare Sprayer,
$50.00; Intl. Harvester Thrash-
ing Machine, straw _ stacker,
$100.00; Upright Grist Mill,
$50.00; Small Wise Hammer
Mill, $75.; Wheel Barrow type
Orchard Sprayer, $15.00. Dr. D.
W. Pritchett, Barnesville.
David Bradley 2 Wheel Gar-
den Tractor, 3 HP Wisc. Motor,
nearly new, 6 turn plow, cul-
tivator, and plows, 30 in. sickle
bar mower, exc. cond., $175.00
cash. L. S. Willis, Blakely.
One J. D. Tractor, Model H,
cultivators, distributors, .plant-
ers, and tiller, also power lift,
all good cond. M. C. Coleman,
Cobbtown, Rt. 2.
Small J. D. Dise Tiller, 4
Disc Tiller, new disc, 2 wheel
on rubber, good running cond.,
$125. E. T. Mathis, Avera.
24 in. Rock Grist Mill, good
cond., standard make; Sharp-
less Separator, good as mew,
reasonable price. Mrs. H. V.
Whittle, Fowlston.
One Bolens Huski Garden
Tractor, 3 hp, rubber _ tires,
tandem harrow, 3 disc tiller,
with turn plow, cultivators,
Bueha Vista.
Graham Hoeme Spring Tooth
Plow, 5 teeth with extra 2 ex-
tension teeth, used very little,
mounted on rubber, for sale or
trade for 2 disc turn plow to
fit Farmall C; also be able to
use it on touch-control lift.
James Veal, Cedartown, Rt. 3.
2 heavy large capacity Army
Wagons with wide steel tires,
2 H dise harrow and some oth-
er equipment, cheap. W. H.
Ivey, Milledgeville, Rt. 1, Box
12; :
Good Wood Wheel Wagon, 2
H cap., good body and brakes,
$35. cash, or exch. John Self,
Villa Rica, Rt. 1.
1945 Rototiller, 20 in., rubber
tire wheels, no reverse shift,
used only few times, includes
new seeder and other attach-
ments, $295.00. E. A, Anderson,
Atlanta, 1810 Myrtle Drive, S.
W. RA 4615.
Fordson tractor, 2 H wagon,
5 Row Grain Drill, for sale or
trade for corn or -other feed.
W. A. Douglas, Wrightsville.
Incubator, used 1 time, prac-
tically new, hot water kerosene
heat, 150 cap. Mrs. W. H. Wal-
ters, Lavonia, Rt. 2.
1947 Farmall B Tractor, lift,
plow, bush and bog harrow,
smoothing harrow, mower.
Guar. good outfit. Can be fi-
nanced. James H. Kent, Pow-
der Springs, Rt. 2.
Farmall tractor, F-12, on
good rubber, 2 plows, disc, and
bush and bog, $350. Mrs. J. H.
Fair, Atlanta, 522 Luckie St.,
N. W. AT 9245.
John Deere M tractor, 2 disc
48 Allis-Chalmers C Tractovr,
distribu- |
tors, dbl. sec. harrow, 20 disc.:2
little, $1000. Exch. for cattle at
farm 4 mi. N. Ashburn, Hwy.
25 mi.
Want 4 good Electric brood-
ers, preferably 1000 chick ca-
pacity each. C. G. Garner, Ath-
ens, Agr. Ext, Bldg.
Want Pulley for Ferguson
tractor. C. B. Milner, Shiloh.
Want J. D. Six Disc Tiller,
not over 50 miles Athens. No
Junk. Reuel Jenkins, Daniels-
ville, RFD 1.
Want used tractor and equip-
ment. Must be in good running
condition, cheap for cash. Give
particulars. ater Bryant,
Grantville, Box 204.
Want a pulley power take-
off for Ford or Ford-Ferguson
tractor. J. J. Waters, Louisville.
Want medium size Crawler
Type tractor with bull dozer
in good condition. Quote. Juli-
an H. Johnson, Gough. 5
for Ford Tractor with spring
trips on feet. Curtis Segars,
Martin, Rt. 1.
Want tractor planter in good
condition for Model H John D.
tractor. Arthie D. McDaniel,
Duluth.
Want one 4 ply tractor tire,
size 9x24 in. Must be in good
cond., cheap for cash. G. F.
Martin, Blythe.
Want Pickup Harrow
Ford tractor. H.
Ellaville.
Want Crawler with bulldozer
blade, and bush and bog har-
row; Also tractor with parts.
Reply by letter giving price
and all details. T. A. Hunt,
Stone Mountain, Rockbridge |
Rd., Rt. 3:
Want used Chore Master
Garden Tractor, reasonably
priced, near Atlanta. C. Dun-
a. Atlanta, 338 Candler Rd.,
S.-E.
for
M. Johnson,
Want Garden Tractor, large
size, good condition. W. C. By-
ington, Newnan, Rt. 3.
Want 2 Row Tractor with or
without equipment. Give par-
ticulars. J. D. Harris, Monroe.
Rt... ;
ley, LaFayette.
Want second hand Ford trac-
tor with or without equipment.
Give best cash prices. Earlie
Cawson, West Green.
Want Cultivators for W. D.
Allis-Chalmers Tractor, also
planters for same. Will buy
separately. Avery J. Jackson,
Carrollton, Rt. 2.
Want 39 or 50 Ford Tractor
with planter and cultivators,
good shape, reasonable price.
C. R. Worrall, Austell, Rt. 1.
Want No. 16 Cole Planter,
and Guano Distributor, within
Atlanta. Must be in
good condition and reasonable.
L. E. Randall, Atlanta, 113 Key
Ra.,; S$. EB
Want Cultivator with disc
and planter, also fertilizer at-
Want Front End Cultivator |-
-|Plants, 50c C; Raspberry,
je C; 500, $3.; $6. M; Klondi
Scuppernong cuttings, 50c 1
Catnip, 25c bunch. Add
C; 500, $4.50; $9. M; Mastoc
75 C; 500, $3.; $5. M; Klon
Scuppernong cuttings, 50
Peppermint, 25 doz.
age. Mrs. Effie Crowe,
berry, 200, $1.10; 500, $2.25
M. Del. No checks. C. W.
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
and Copenhagen Cabbag
White Bermuda and S
Wax Onion Plants, 500, $1.2
$2. M del. in Ga. I. L. Stok
Fitzgerald. :
ing size, 75c doz.; Blackber
65c doz.; Yellow Root, 35 do
Add postage. Mrs: Manda
derson, Ellijay, Rt. 2.
Boysenberry,
Kudzu, each $1. doz.; Thor
less Boysenberry,
J. W
ton Ave.
plants,
PLANTS FOR 8.
Copenhagen and Cha
field Cabbage Plants,
strong, frostproof, 500,
$1.50 M; 5 7.00; Whi
muda and Co: lard plants,
$1.25; $2. M. Ship daily. Q i
ty and count guaranteed.
Fitzgerald, Irwinville.
Genuine Blakemore
Klondike Strawberry, 80c
$6. M; Lawton Blackberry,
doz.; $6. C. T. H. Graves, |
etteville. 4
Early bearing Straw!
75 C. Exch. for feed sa
any kind. Each pay
Sold only in Georgia. L:
Mills, Folkston, Rt. 2,
Mtn. Huckleberry . pl.
bearing size, 75 doz.;
Root plants, 45 doz.;
Bushes, 65 doz. Add
Miss _Malvie Henderson,
jay, Rt. 3.
Blackberry, Birdeye
Mt. Huckleberry plants,
doz.; Yellow Root Pla
doz.; Rat Banes, 55c doz.
postage. Mrs. Homer
son, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Nice Kudzu Crowns, $9.
Del. in Ga. Mrs. G. M. He
Dahlonega, Rt. 1. ~
Imp. Klondike Straw:
R
5
doz.; Blakemore Black
$1. doz. Plus postage.
Mashburn, Cumming. R
Sage Plants, 30c ea.;
Everbearirig Strawberry,
Himalaya Dewberry, 6
Blueberry, 75c.doz. Ad
age. Mrs. Nellie Parker,
ville, Rt. 6.
Blakemore Strawberry, $1.
500, $4.50; $9. M; Mastoc
6
C; 500, $2.75; $4.75
Blakemore Strawberry,
60c_C; 500, $2.75; $4.75
Add pe
ie ee pote ming, Rt. 1. :
ing under 3 considered. j ;
State particulars. R. T. Long- 1 oF eee ae
Jersey Wakefield, Extra e
Mt. duckleberry Plants, b
He
Himalaya Blackberry Pla '
2 and 3 yr. ol
10, $i,
Toole, Macon, 1381 Bu
,
i
Mt. huckleberry, bearing siz
75 z.; blackberry
lime and fertilizer spreader, 3
ton tractor wagon, 52 R com-
bine. Half price. Tel. MO 45.
R. C. Holloway, Manchester,
519 Indianola Drive.
19 Farmall B tractor, lift,
plow, bush and bog harrow,
mower. Can be financed. Make
offer. James K. Kent, Powder
Springs, Rt. 2.
John Deere A Model 1949,
Five Dise Tiller, Planters; Cul-
tivators, 6 ft. Finishing Har-
row, all perfect shape. Good
Be W. W. Nix, Rockmart,
be sk
4 Disc Tiller, good condition,
for sale or trade for Ford Cul-
tivator or Lime Spreader, etc.,
anything that works on Ford
tractor. Tillmon Anderson.
Farmall H tractor, planters,
cultivators, fertilizer hoppers,
Ist class cond., priced to. sell.
Come see. James O. Ennis, Mil-
ledgeville, Rt. 5.
Hopper Corn Planter, $10.00;
One Army Wagon Wheel in
good shape, $6.00; Dixie Turn
Plow, $3. Edgar Bowen, Offer-
man.
One 2 H plow, Chattanooga
64, good as new, for sale. Miss
mowing machine, disc harrow,
good cond., $350. W. E. Boat-
wright, Rayle.
All Steel 2-H. C. Corn Shell-
er, for hand, or power operated,
with pulley attached, No. #
Kelley Duplex Corn and Coi-
fee Crusher. E. C. McKinney,
Blue Ridge, Rt. 2.
' Allis-Chalmers. 40 in. Com-
bine, running cond., bargain,
$175. cash. Jack Blackwell,
Maysville, Rt. 1.
New W. D. Allis-Chalmers
Tractor Seed Soil Plow, and 8
Disc Athens Harrow, used a-
bout 3 days. Mrs. E. P. Wil-
liams, Greshamville.
LA John Deere Tractor, bot-
tom plow, cultivator, distribu-
tor, planter, harrow, stalk cut-
ter, belt pulley, good _ tires,
$600. cash. Joe McKinnon,
Douglas, 107 Caledge Dr,
Case VAC Tractor with cul-
tivators and planters, Case
Cide Delivery Rake, good run-
ning order. Mrs. Ray Hill, By-
romville,
1948 Ford tractor, bush and
bog harrow, lift type, 2 H wag-
on, also young mule for sale.
Pearlie Knight, Doerun, Rt. 2.
Letters ans. W. L. Bright, Car-
plow, dbl.
fertilizer,
all hydraulic
touchomatic controlled,
cond. Phone Hamilton,
2896. E. C. Hambrick,
Mountain Valley, POB 76.
cultivators,
equipment,
section harrow,
disc, 2 section, 6 ft. mower, set
planting
tachment for Model A Farmall
tractor. H. F. Black, Lawrence-
ville, Rt. 1.
Want one 15 H. P. gas motor,
suitable for turning Grist Mill,
one tractor wagon in good con-
dition. Jack F., Davenport, Ten-
nille, RFD 2.
8
and
good
Ga.
Pine
ry
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY WANTED
PLANTS FOR SALE
price. Frank C. Chapman,
zella, Rt. 1.
with equipment,
Buena Vista, Rt. 2.
Want good
er, and Farm Wagon on
ber. Must be in good condi
Box 190.
Want 5 or 6 Dise Athens
ler,
rollton, Rt. 3.
Sandersville, Rt. 2.
Wanted Steel Tractor wheels
for Model G John Deere trac-
tor. Perino Dearing, Covington.
Want 2 Sections of Drag Har-
rows in good condition. State
Want good used Ford tractor
good condi-
tion, for cash. R. H. Whitman,
used Hammer
Mill, good used Manure Spread-
R. W. Norton, Eatonton, P. O.
cheap. Julian DooLittle,
Large imp. Klondike Straw-
berry, 50c C; Muscadine Vines,
4 ft., 40c.; Mtn. Huckleberry, 2
doz., 75c; Blue Damson Plum
Sprouts, 2 ft. 40c. Add post-
age. Rosie Crowe, Cumming,
G1:
Finest Gem Strawberry, $1.
C; Also Elder, Blackberry,
Sassafras, Yellow Dock Root,
Wild Cherry, Plum, Persimmon
bark, 2 lbs. $1.00; Walnut
Meats, $1. lb. Exch. for print
sacks. Mrs. John Myers, Hart-
well, Rt. 2.
Mt. Huckleberry plants, bear-
ing size, 75 doz.; Blackberry
plants, Birdeye Bushes, 65c
doz.; Wild Strawberry, 5 doz.,
$1.00; Yellow Root, 50c doz.
Add postage. Mrs. Howard
Li-|
rub-
tion.
Til-
birdeye bushes, 65c doz.; yelloy
root plants, 50c doz.; wil
strawberry, 5 doz. $1. Add post
age. Miss Audry Henderson
Ellijay. Rt. 3. we -
$1. C; Himalaya Dewberry,
6, $1.; Blueberry, 75c doz. Ade
postage. Mrs. Nellie Parker,
Gainesville, Rt. 6 a
Mastodon Strawberry Plan
70c C; 500, $3.; $5.25 M; Klo
dike, $4.25 M. A. D. Jones,
Cumming, Rt. 1, i
Rabbiteye Blueberries, me-
dium to large, sweet juicy fruit,
strong, 3-4 yr.: plants, 3, $1.25
Thornless Boysenberry, $1. doz.;
Native Gooseberry, 3, $1.25; J.
E. Granger, Reidsville.
Everbearing Mastodon Straw.
berry, 90c C; $5. M; Klondike,
60c C; $4. M; Also Striped B
Runner Bean Seed, 50c
cup; Cream Crowder Peas,
lb. Exch. for good print sacks.
Each pay postage. Mrs. Guy
Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1. ie
Early, Large, Imp. Klondike
Strawberry, 50c C; Mtn. Huckle-
berry, bearing size, 2 doz., 75c;
Blue Damscn Plum Sprouts, 40
ea.; Muscadine Vines, 4 ft., 40c;
Easley, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Add postage. Rosie Crowe, Cum-
ming, Rt. 1. ks
Add postage.
Samuel Caine,
Strawberry, 75
erry, 6, 50c. Add
ks. Mrs. Lona
hlonega, Rt. 1,
trawberry, 300,
$4.50 M; Lady
00, $3.; Kudzu
| 1 and 2 yrs.
O, $7.; $12.50 M.
. Ethel Crowe,
wherry, 50c C;
fakefield Cabbage,
~ Lee Crow,
C. Taylor,
ionary and Mas-
Plants, $1. C.
Carr. lton, Rt,
woeny, 75: C. $1.
ec CU; of.
100 plants for 2
jumbo Strawberry,
have berries the
year, $1. C. Ex-
Cabbage Plants.
. E. E. Clark,
Wax Bermuda
pencil size, 500,
Del. PP; 5 M,
Fr. F. Stokes, Fitz-
7s
ee a
ry, bearing size,
doz, Garlic, 50c
Mrs. Lee El-
Plants, large lus-
bear until late
e, T5c C. Packed
Add postage. Mrs.
pecet Rt. :.1.
erry plants,
doz.; Aiazel-
00 doz; Wild
doz., $1.00; Rats
3 Yellow Root,
for print sacks,
e, Mrs. Nan-
ijay, Rt. 3,
ng \ rieties Strawberry
0, $1.50; 500, $3. PP.
Gordon. -
1 Wakefield Frost-
e, and White Ber-
n plants, 300,
$1.75 M. Delivered.
se lbts,
Wakefield Frost-
, and White Ber-
1 plants, 300, $1.00;
$1.75 M, PP.; Also
nato seed, $2.50 lb.
Pitts.
ms, rooted, 1 and
. C; $7.00;
', 70c C; 500, $3.00.
C.. D:. Grow,
Tender White
er Bean Seed, 45c
R. 'T. Bennett, Jas-
il, Dry, hand pick-
ed pea seed, 1951
e PA.
.| round, 40c pack; 3 pks., $
.|Pink Half Runners,
90c; |
er Half Runner Garden Bean
. Seed, White Tender Cutshort,
Cornfield Beans, free of wee-
vils, $1. cup. Plus postage. Mrs.
T. H. Wade, Talking Rock, Rt.
1. :
60 lbs. Perkins Long Green
Pod Okra, 65c 1b.; 2 Ibs., $1.25
.|PP through 2nd zone; Exch.
for large Brown, Purple Hull
Crowder Peas for planting: 1
lb. for 3 Ibs. (want 100 lbs.
peas); Also want 25 bu. Seed
Oats. Quote. Olin Burdette,
LaGrange, Rt. 4.
Large round yellow meat
watermelon seed, 35, 10c and
stamped envelope; Little White
Mush peas, 25c cup. Add post-
age. Mrs. P. E. Traylor, Rebec-
ca.
Egg size gourd seed, 25c doz.;
Also 10 lbs. Sou. Dynamite
Popcorn, $1.75 bu. Fred Thom-
as, Crandall, Rt. 1.
Gourd seed, 30c pack; 4 pks.,
$1.00 Giant ~Gourd, a NS
Gourds, $3. doz.; Long Wide
Leaf Bull Face tobacco seed,
75c tbl; Sage and Catnip
plants, $1.. doz. L. J. Hilis,.
Cumming, Rt. 5.
Old Time Garden Bean seed,
tender White, Cream, Stiri a,
ite
Creasebacks, Cutshorts, Brown
Pole, 50c cup; Old Time Eng-
lish Pea, $1. cup; White Mus
pea, 3 cups, $1. No checks.
Add postage. Edward Goble,
Ellijay, Rt. 3.
White Half Runner, Little
Brown Bunch, and Long Brown
Stripe Cornfield beans, 40c Ib.;
Early Yellow Sweet, 15c Ib.
Add postage. Mrs. Estelle
Payne, Canton, Rt. 3.
Tender Green Okra Seed.
Make offer. R. J. Tomlin, Dal-
las, Rt. 4.
Beer Seed, big start, fresh,
Old Time Multiplying Cali-
fornia, 25c. Mrs. Ella Green,
Smyrna.
Green Seed Cane, $20. M.
W. W. Williams, Quitman.
Ky. 31 Fescue, Alta Fescue,
good Pasture Mixture of 80
Pet., Ky. 31 with 10 Pet.. Orch-
ard Grass, 10 Pct. Rye Grass,
recleaned, in 50 Ib. bags; 2500
Ibs. in lot at good price, Cons.
exch. for hammer mill wit
mixer large enough to crush
hay and corn. G. T. McDonald,
Oakwood.
Rockyford Cantaloupe, Pump-
kin, Squash, Mammoth Sun-
flower, Black Leaf Watermel-
on, Long Green Pod Okra,
Baby Lima beans. Reasonable.
Betty Newborn, Bolingbroke,
Rt. 1.
2 kinds Pumpkin seed, Gar-
rison Watermelon, 15c pkt.; Al-
so shelled pecans, $1.50 Ib. Add
postage. Viola C. Brady, Cairo,
Rt. 1, Box 343.
No. 1 Kobe Lespedeza seed,
18c lb.; No. 2 Kobe, 10c
FOB my farm. G. W. Darden,
Watkinsville. :
Ga. Black Pole Bean Seed,
25c cup. PP in Ga. Mrs. W. H.
McWilliams, Lithonia, Rt. 3.
s
Tender Okra Seed, 30c cup;
4 cups, $1.00; Red Speckled
Crowder, and White Mush peas,
35c cup; 4 cups, $1. Add post-
age. Exch. for White or Print
sacks. Mrs. Carl Smith, Elli-
jay, Rt. 3. |
Cantaloupe seed, Hales best,
1st year, hand cleaned, $1.80
lb.; Old Fashion Multiplying
Scullion Onion Sets, 35c qt.
Plus postage.. Mrs. S. R. Smith,
Royston. :
50 lbs. Cannon Ball Water-
melon Seed, $1. Ib. Plus post-
age. No checks. Delano R.
Stevens, Macon, RFD 6.
50 Ibs. or more Long Green
Okra seed, hand picked, clean-
ed, from select pods, 65c 16;
5 lbs. or more, 60c lb. Will full
COD orders. Mrs. L. A. Elling-
ton, Lawrenceville, Rt. 3.
White Velvet Okra Seed,
bears until late frost, 5Uc pt.
Add postage. Mrs. Garnett Sim-
mons, Baldwin, Rt. 1.
Some seed cane forsale. W.
Ww. Williams, Quitman. :
Little White Ten-
germ., $3.50 bu.
Ib. Cotton Seed for sale. F,
GRAIN AND HA
FOR SALE
A 7
"FOR SALE
1 ton shucks, top fodder for
sale or exch. for pigs or shoats.
L. A. Williams, Buford, Rt. 2,
Care Martin Evans Garage. |
Local grown cut and cured| Rp
hay, approx. 150 bales, $1.40
per bale at barn. Marvin Mad-
dox, Winder. *
Cokers ~ Victorgrain Seed,
Oats, $1.50 bu.; Also certified
Coker Fulgrain, $1.75 bu. All
recleaned and bagged in 4 bu.
bags. Phone 2948. Joe D. Mur-
row, Farmington.
About 75 tons goed running
peanut hay, $35. ton in field,
or $40. ton xt barn, 5 mi. North
ge Silas Greenway, Bartow,
500 bu. clean, graded Victor
Oats, $1.25 bu. Bring sacks.
Elmer Treisch, Finleyson.
Very best grade Sericea Hay,
$50. ton. Trade some for Easy
Flow distributor or cultivator
for Ford tractor. T. H. Moore,
Milner, RFD 1. (Old Huguely
Farm).
Hay: Alfalfa, $60. ton; Les-
pedeza and Grass, $40. ton;
Bright Straw, $30. ton. Del. 3-
5 ton lots at this price in 100
mile radius, Charles H. Mur-
row, Farmington. Phone 2698.
100 bales Bean Hay, $1.25
bale; Crab Grass Hay, $1.00
h| bale, at barn. Approx, 60 to
65 Ibs. each. No letters. 21/2
mi, Powder Springs Road from
Marietta. Fred Cunningham,
Marietta, Rt. 5. .
New crop Peanut Hay, A-1
quality, delivered in trailerload
lots. From 10-12 tons. Write for
vie Vv. H. Burke, Ashburn,
eet ;
Abruzzi Seed Rye, 90 Pct.
OB. A. L.
Dykes, Cochran,
20 tons good quality Peanut
Hay, no poison used, no weath-
er damage, $22.50 ton. Phone
(night) 2897. D. F, Hungerford,
Americus, 235 Bell St.
Good quality Peanut Hay,
free of poison, delivered in
truckload lots. Write for prices.
James Lewis, Arabi.
Several loads Lespedeza hay,
baled without rain, $30, ton;
Several tons wheat and oat
h| straw, $17.50 ton at barn; Also
20 tons Coker 100 Wilt Re-
sistant Cotton Seed, cert., $120.
ton, bulk at farm. OV.
Vaughn, Bogart.
COTTON SEED FOR SALE
2000 ibs. D. P. L. cotton seed,
No. 15, planted one year from
breeder, carefully handled,
ginned 1 variety gin, pure. Sell
in 100 Ib. lots if wanted, $10.
nt R. B. Elliott, Lavonia, Rt.
8 tons 2 St, Year Empire
Bennett, Bowersville.
Early Fluff Cotton Seed,
from Coastal Plains Exp. Sta-
tion last spring, very early
planted May 15, finished pick-
ing Oct. 18. Made 42 lint last
year, better. than inch staple,
kept pure at gin, $10. Cwt. W.
H. Sanders, Rockmart, Rie
Coker 100 wilt resistant cot-
ton seed, certified, Blue Tag,
ist. year, 90 Pct. germ., bagged
in new white cotton bags, ma-
chine delinted, treated with
ceresan, $8. Cwt. Joe D. Mur-
row, Farmington. Phone 2948.
Pure Coker Cotton Seed, $10.
Cwt. F. O. Elliott, Lavonia, Rt.
a
Pure recleaned Empire Wilt
Resistant Big Boll Cottonseed,
grown from foundation seed,
picked dry and ginned one va-
riety gin, 8c lb.~ Riley C.
Couch, Turin,
D. P. L. No. 15 cotton seed,
96.50. Pct. germ., $10. Cwt. Fob.
Dwain Cheek, Lavonia,
2 tons Coker 100 cotton seed,
kept pure at gin, $10. Cwt.
Sam Pelfrey, Dalton, Rt. 1.
Cokers 100 Wilt Resistant
cotton seed, certified, with
blue tag, $10, Cwt. FOB. R. E.
Aycock, Monroe,
Red Speckled Crowder peas,
30c lb. in 5 lb. lots; Tender
White and Speckled Half Run-
ner beans, 50 cup. Add post-
age. G. T. Brown, Ball Ground,
ek.
Tender Blue- Pole bean,
White, Streaked Half Runner,
50c cup; White Crowder, Pur-
ple Hull peas, also Six Weeks,
6 cups, $1.25. Plus postage. No
checks nor COD. Mrs. Lon Ash-
worth, Dacula, Rt. 1.
Brown Speckled Crowder
peas, 25c lb. Plus postage; Al-
so Little White Multiplying on-
ions, and Strawberry plants
for sale. Mrs. W. H. Belk, Dan-
ielsville, Rt. 2.
Old Time Tender Speckled
Half Runner Garden Beans, 50c
teacup;. Also Large Red Skin
Peanuts, $6. bu. Miss Gennia
Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
3 bu. White Crowder, 2 bu.
black crowder peas and 12 bu.
barbs. Make offers on all or
any part. McArthur Glass,
Buena Vista.
Cream Half Runner. Little
Pink 6 Wks. beans, 50c cup;
white half runner, pole beans,
55c cup; garden salet peas, 60c
cup; brown sugar crowders,
50c cup. Add postage. No chks.
Exch, oe white or print
sacks. Jemima Crump, Talking
Rock, RFD 2.
White, tender Half Runner
beans, 50c pt. Add _ postage.
Mrs. Eula Clayton, Ellijay, Rt.
2.
Purple Hull Blackeyed
Crowder, and 6 Weeks Black-
eyed, (2 crop peas), each 20c
lb. Weevil treated, for eating
or seed. Add postage. Reavis
Harmon, Calhoun, Rt. 2.
Col. Running Butterbeans,
'40c cup. Exch. for salad Eng-
lish Peas, or Cutshort Beans.
H. E. Ingram, Austell, Rt. 2.
Crowders:| White, White
oa Red. Speckled Pole
Cat, clean, weevil treated,
30c cup; 4 cups, $1.00; Add 20c-
ostage on $1..orders; 6 Weeks
rown Crowders, 5 cups, $1.25
prepaid. Mrs. H. E. Richard-
son, Bowdon, Rt, 1.
Colored Bunch Butterbeans,
1951 crop, 50e lb. Add: postage.
Mrs. J. E. Sorrells, Royston.
Tender Garden Beans,
Striped, White, Peanut Half
Runners, Speckled Cut Short,
Cornfield, 50c cup. Exch. for
print sacks, 2 cups beans for 4
sacks. Mrs. Ivy Southerland,
Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Good Tender Garden Beans,
Little White, Large White,
Pink Peanut Half Runners, al-
so Salet Peas, purple and white
bloomers, 50e cup. Exch. for
sacks, 5 white, or 4 print. Add
poscee: Dessie Vick, Ellijay,
Good Tender Garden Beans,
White Half Runner, Striped
G.| Half Runners, Brown and Pink
Six- Weeks, 50c cup; Tender
Salet Peas, 75c cup. Exch. for
feed sacks. Add postage. Eula
Beal, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
25 bu. 90 Day Velvet Beans,
sound, for sale. Mrs. P. B. Mor-
ris, Thomson, Rt. 2.
White Half Runner Beans,
50c cup. Mrs. Howard Green,
Loganville, Rt. 3.
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
1 dozen Old Fashion Peach
Trees, Presses and Clear Seed,
$2. doz.; Sweet and Sour Pome-
granate Bush, $1. ea.; 2 Black
Walnuts, 2, $1.25; Large Red
Fig Bushes, Wild Cherry Trees,
$1. ea.; Umbrella China Trees,
2, $1.25. Mrs. V. M. Johnson,
Shellman.
Brown Turkey and Celectial
Fig bushes, cheap, according to
size, at my place. Mrs. -W. D.
Callaway, Atlanta, 1696 Rogers
Ave., S. W. RA 0179.
Seedling peach trees, from
good seed, also scuppernong
and muscadine vines, 1 yr. old,
1 to 3 ft, high, $1. doz and
postage afded. S. A. Fieener,
Rishland
__ PECAN AND oe
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE ~
Pecan trees: Govt. insp.
Schley, Stuart, Moneymakers,
2-3 ft. $2.00; 3-4 ft., $2.25; 4-
5 ft., $2.50; 5-6 ft. $2.75; 6-8
ft., $3. Calvin Harman, Stovall.
Apple, Peach, Pear, Cherry
trees, Grape Vines, one and
two year, at low prices. State
inspected. T. M. Webb, Ellijay.
Inspected leading varieties
Peach trees, 1 yr., 18-24 in.,
35c; Luty, Niagara, Concord 2
yr. Grape Vines, 25c; Scupper-
nongs, Everbearing Fig, 50c;
Boysenberry, Young Dewberry,
Red Raspberry, $1.00 doz. PP.
Lee Head, Cornelia.
Bearing size Chinese Ches-
nuts, $2.50 ea. where they
stand. T. E. Eason, Atlanta,
1182 Gunclub Rd., N. W.
Heavy bearing, large sweet
fruit, Peach, Plum and Fig
bushes, 50c and $1. ea., accord-.
ing to size; blueberry plants,
75c doz. Add postage. Gladys
Duran, Cumming, Rt. 1.
Hazelnut and Blueberry
bushes, 12, $1.00; muscadine
and scuppernong grape vines,
8, $1.50; Quince trees, 6, $1.00;
also Kudzu Crowns, $1.50 C;
500, $7.00; $12.50 M. Grace
Eaton, Dahlonega, Rt, 1.
Fig bushes, 2 yrs. old, rooted,
$1. ea.; 2 or more, 85c ea. post-
paid. G. M. Moseley, Menlo.
Kudzu Crowns, $1.25 C; 500,
$7.00; $12.50 M; muscadine and
scuppernong vines, 8, $1.50;
hazelnut, blueberry, 12, $1.25;
silver leaf maples and crabap-
ples, 6, $1.00; No. 1 _ garlie
bulbs, 50c doz. Mrs. M. lu. Eat-
_on, Dahlonega, Rt. 1.
Top soil Scuppernong, very
prolific, early and very sweet,
Tar Heel, a heavy producing _
variety of the self-fertile type
(male vine), rooted, 85c ea. not
delivered. Mrs. Lona Tallent,
Lula, RFD.
Horse Apple, Persimmon,
Cherry, Hickory Nut, Black
Locust, Catawba, Red and Yel-
low lLoucas Plum, Current
Trees, 2-3 ft., 50c ea.; Goose-
berry, Red Hall Himalaya
Blackberry, 1-2 ft., 25c ea. root-
ed. PP on $2. orders. Add 25
postage under this amount,
Josephine Raley, Mitchell.
Muscadine and Scuppernong
Grape Vines, o$1.50 doz.; Early
May Cherry, Quince, Pear
Trees, 6, $1.; Trailing Ground
Birch Vine, 50c doz.; Hazelnut,
Blueberry, 75e doz.; Kudzu
Crowns, $1.50 C; 500, $14.; $12.-
50 M. Mrs. F. M. Eaton, Dah-
lonega, Rt. 1.
Rooted leading varieties Scup-
pernong Vines for sale. L. Red-
fern, Tennille. : :
State insp. Stuart and Moore
4-5 ft., and 5-6 ft. Pecan Trees
= sale. H. W. Gray, Sparks,
tI.
Pecan Trees: Stuart, Money-
maker, State insp., true to
name, 1-2 ft., $1.; 2-3 ft., $1.25;
3-4 ft., $1.50 ea.; Seedling Pe-
can Trees, 3-7 ft., $1. ea. FOB.
R. L. Adkins, Cordele, Rt. 3.
Bearing size Chestnut Trees,
$2.50 ea.; Come after. Will dig
them; Also Scarlet Everbear-
ing Strawberry Plants, $1. Cj
$8. M. PP in Ga. T. E. Eason,
Atlanta, Rt. 14, Box 34.
Trees: _ pple, Ranoka, Almeta,
Horse, Golden Beauty, Yates,
Hackwort, Winesdp, Red June,
Red Flesh, Tenderline, York;
Peach: Hiley, Mayflower, South-
land; Pear: Keifer, Large June,
Orient, Lecunte, Douglas, 1-
ft., 15c ea.; 2-3 ft., 25c ea; 3-4
ft., 40c ea. Inspected, cert. De-
livered. A. J. Willoughby,
Waco. ;
State insp. leading variety
Stewart Pecan Trees, 2-3 fit., $1.;
3-4 ft, $1.50; 4-5 ft, $2.; 5-6
ft., $2.50; 6-7 ft. $3. ea, FOB.
50 trees or more 25c off per
tree. Ga. License only. M. M.
Newsome, Sandersville.
Fig Bushes, 2 varieties, me-
dium aid large fruit, 2 yrs. old,
rooted, PP. G. M. Moseley,
Menlo,
Muscadine Grape Vines, &,
$1.25; Hazelnut, Blueberry
Bushes, $1.25 doz; Kudzu
Crowns, 500, $6.50; $12. M; Cat-
nip, Tansy, Peppermint Boca
75c doz. Mrs. James aters,
Dahlonega, Rt. 1,
5
?
~
PECANS AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
o
May Cherry and Beechnut,
rooted, %5c ea. Crabapple,
Muscadine Grape Vines, 20c ea.;
6, $1.; Hazlenut, 6, $1.; Blue-
berry, 75c doz.; Black Rasp-
berry Plants, 6, $1.: Sage Plants,
xooted, 20c ea.; 6, $1.; Garlic
Bulbs, 75c doz. Add _ postage.
Mrs. Robert H. Norrell, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 6.
Stayman Winesap, Yellow De-
Jicious, Yates, Red June, Horse
Early Harvest, Detroit Red,
Rome Beauty Apple Trees, Al-
#0 Golden Jubilee, Sullivan,
and Elberta Peach Trees, 273
fi., 50c. M. J. Hitt, Jasper, Rt.
8B.
Apple, Peach, Pear, Cherry,
Chesnut trees and Grape Vines,
State insp., for sale. T. M.
Webb, Ellijay.
Lemon and Celestial Fig Set-
_ tings, 3-4 ft., $1.00; 6. $5. B. O.
Fussell, Atlanta, 889 Edgewood
Ave.
Hazelnut, Beechnut bushes,
Crabapple trees, Muscadine
Grape vines, each $1. per 3;
Also Catnip, 6, $1. Add postage.
Mrs. Mae Turner, Gainesville,
Rt. 6.
3 yr. old Bronze Scupper-
nong, Black Walnut, Calif. Fig,
Jarge, 50c ea.; Mt. Huckleber-
_ Yy, Hazelnut, Raspberry, 5. $1.
PP. Mrs. C. B. Robinson,
don.
Ow-
Hazelnut bushes, 6, $1.00;
Beechnut, 25c ea.; Muscadine
Grape vine, Crabapple _ trees,
20 ea.: 6, $1.00; Blueberry
bushes, 75c doz.; $4.50 C; Gar-
lic bulbs,50c doz. Add postage.
Mrs. Lessie B. Boling, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 6.
PEANUTS AND PECANS
FOR SALE
100 lbs. extra large Stuart
Pecans, well filled, 40c lb. FOB.
Also good Seedlings for sale.
G. P. Nunn, Crawfordville, Rt.
2.
Spanish Peanuts, hand picked,
$6. bu. Add postage. No less
than peck sold. Mis. Hoke
Golden, Bremen, Rt. 2, Box 25.
1951 crop well developed
Schleys, 32c; Stuarts, 30c; Van-
g@aman, 25c; puccess, 24c;
Moneymakers, 18 lb. No less
10 lbs. shipped. W. S. Law-
ton, Sylvania, Rt. 2.
Pecan Meats, $1. lb. Plus post-
age. Mrs. Virginia Bryant, Lut-
hersville.
Large, well filled Stewarts,
- 1951 crop, 5 lbs. PP $2. Send
check or currency. J. W. Lang,
Omega.
100 lbs. good heavy Stuart
ecan, 28c 'b.; Also 200 lbs.
eavy large Frocher and Van-
demans, 22c Ib. Orders under
25 lbs., add 4c extra for all
nuts. Express, PP not paid.
Mrs. A. G. Ferrell, Boston. :
1000 Ibs. thin shell pecans,
42 Ibs. insured by Parcel Post,
$3.50; 100 Ibs. Double sacked,
-at RR Depot, $25. Cash in ad-
vance. Dont come on Saturday.
12 miles E. Montezuma, 4 mi.
W. Henderson. Chas. L. Colli-
son, Montezuma, Rt. 2.
Several hundred pounds 1951
rop Paper Shell Pecaus, 25c
Jb. in lots of25. lbs. or more.
uglas Slaton, Richland, Rt. 2.
1951 crop Stuart pecans, 40c
db. parcel post. Min. 10 Ibs.
John F. Lindsey, Tifton, Rt. 6.
Sound, select Schley paper-
shell pecans, 40c lb. in 5 Jb.,
Jots; select Stuarts, 30c lb. 5
Ib. lots. 1951 crop. No pops.
en ~. Minchew Jr. Macon,
3.
Stuart pecans, 3c5 lb. Highest
quality, hand picked. FOB par-
cel post. Miss Martha Williams,
Quitman, 410 West Screven St.
Large sized Schley pecans,
highest quality, all new- crop,
50e Ib. in 10 Ib. lots, FOB.
Charles Gairett, Fort Gaines,
Small seedling pecans, 20c
ib. in 100 Ib.
ance York, Luthersville.
100 Ibs, 40c Ib. Sell any|
amount. Benny dee White, |
Hartwell. ;
_J. M. Jones, Grayson.
|
|
lot. FOB. Mrs. | Mashburn, Cumming Rt. 5,
1951 Stuart Selected pecans,|100 Ib. cap. 3, $1.; washed and
PEANUTS AND PECANS |
FOR SALE
Large red peanuts, 2-4 in
hull, $2. peck; 6.50 bu.; also
2 bu. black walnuts, hulled,
dry, $2.50 bu. Add _ postage.
G. T. Brown, Ball Ground, Rt.
date
120 lb. Pecans, 20c lb. N.C.
Randall, Martin, Rt. 1.
1951 crop fancy Schley pecans,
50c Ib. 5 Ib. lots and up; Stuarts.
small but sound and well filled,
40c lb. 5 lbs. up; new crop,
sundried apples, Starks Golden
Delicious apples, 50c Ib. 5 lbs.
up. Add postage. No COD. Mrs.
Mobile Pecans (Paper Shell)
1951 crop, 25 lb. in lots 25
Ibs. or more, FOB. Douglas
Slaton, Richland, Rt. 2.
Van Demonk and Delma
Thin Stell Pecans, 5 Ibs., $2.25;
10 lbs., $4.00. Del. to 4th zone.
T. J. Steed, Buena Vista.
Stuart and Moneymaker Pe-
cans, 30c lb. and 25c Ib.; shell-
ed pecans, $1.50 lb. Plus post-
age. Viola C. Brady, Cairo, Rt
1, Box 343.
Pecan Meats, free of hulls,
$1. Pt. Add postage. No checks.
Mrs. Clinton (Zarrett, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 5. :
1951 crop Faney Schley pe-
cans, 50c lb.; Stuarts, small but
sound, well filled, 40c lb.; 51
crop Bright Sundried apples,
Starks Golden Delicious, free
of worms, peel;core, 50c lb. All
sold 5 lb. lots and up. Add
postage. Mrs. J. M. Jones,
Grayson.
HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
Honey: 1-10 Ib. pail del., $2.-
75; 5 lb. pail del., $1.50; through
3rd. zone; 4-10 lb. exp. collect,
$8.; 6-5 lb. Exp. col., $6. Ex-
tracted No. 1 Table Honey. Rev.
Curd Walker, Soperton, Rt. 1.
Choice Gallberry and Tupelo
Comb Honey, 12-2 1/2 lb. jars,
$6. FOB. J. W. Lunsford, Ludo-
wici.
25-30 hives Bees: Italian Bees,
$6.50 per hive; Supers, $1.50 ea.,
8 Frames; and Honey, $6.50
Case; Also some Beeswax at
my home. J. Boatwright,
Waycross, Rt. 3.
150 colonies Italian and Mix-
ed Bees, 10 frame hives, this
years crop honey still in hives,
$10. per hive, without honey;
$15. with honey. R. D. McLarty,
Villa Rica, Rt. 1.
Delicious Comb Honey: One
9-1/2 Ib. pail, $3.25 PP in Ga.
Write for quantity prices on
honey in glass jars. J. O. Hall-
man Sr., Blackshear, Rt. 1, Box
107.
Gallberry Cut Comb Honey,
Case 12-2..1/2 lb. jars, $7.50;
Case 6-5 lb.- jars, $7.25; -Ex-
tracted, Case, 12-2 1/2 lb. jars,
$6.50; Case. 6-5 Ib., $6.50; One
60 lb. can, $9.50. FOB. Allen
C. Herrin, Hortense, P. O. Box
1951 crop strained Table
honey, 6-5 lb. jars, $6.00; one
60 lb. can, $8.95. FOB. H. L.
Hallman, .Nahunta, Box 25.
Pure, bright honey, in Mason
qt. jars, 12 to Cs. $9. case Fob;
also 4Q hives bees in 8 and 10
frame hives. J. W. Sherman,
Alma, Rt. 1.
Approx. 175 colonies* Italian
bees, on wired foundation, 2
story, mostly -Pat. hives. Very
strong in bees and plenty hon-
ey left on. Young queens intro-
duced in Sept., and necessary
items, at my place, 4 mi. No.
Ashburn, $1500.00. V. H. Burke,
Ashburn, Rt. 1.
SACKS FOR SALE
SS
24 lb. White Flour Sacks, 6,
$1.25; Three 50 Ib., $1.25. PP.
Mrs. W. Y. Summers, Newnan,
RE: 26,
100 lb. cap. White Feed Sacks,
25c ea. Plus: postage. Mrs. Otis
Smooth White Feed Sacks,
ironed; 25 ea. unwashed. Add
ostage. Mrs. Vernie Harris,
150 No. 1 Cotton Feed Sacks,
100 Ib, cap. 20 ea. I. Harrison,
Cornelia, Hire 1s 5-4 :
Several Print Sacks, 35 ea.;
3, $1. Add postage. Mrs. T, K.
Moore, Canton, Rt. 2.
200 White Chicken Feed
Sacks, 100 Ib. cap. free of holes,
25c ea. Ship COD. G. M. Wagon-
er, Blairsville, Rt. 2. ;
100 lb. cap. Print Feed Sacks,
clean, free of holes and stains,
35 ea. Add postage. Mrs. Hill
R. Tallant, Cumming, Rt. 2.
Print Feed Sacks, $5. for lot.
MO. Plus shipping charges. Mrs.
D. T. Harris, Statesboro, Rt. 3.
Unwashed white feed sacks,
100 Ib. cap. A-1 grade, smooth,
no lettering, spots, or holes, 25c
Samples, Gainesville, Rt. 1.
100 Ib. cap. Print Sacks, wash-
ed ironed, free of holes, 3, $1.
Add postage. No checks. Mrs.
C., Rt. 1. (Resident of Ga.).
White Feed Sacks, free of
holes and mildew, $2.50 doz.
plus postage. No checks or COD.
Mrs. Virgil Padgett, Jasper, Rt.
Ae 3
Print sacks, 100 lb. cap. un-
washed, $3.75 doz. postpaid: al-
so, White sacks, $2.40 doz.
Ralph Dangar, Woodstock.
100 lb. cap. feed sacks, wash-
ed, free of holes and stains,
25c ea. unwashed, 20c ea. PP
in Ga. Mrs. E. L. Robinson,
Talking Rock, Rt. 2.
SACKS WANTED
Want smooth print sacks.
i J. A. Thompson, Manor,
ti As
Want exchange 4 Ibs. mixed
pecans for 4-100 Ib. print sacks,
Vienna, Rt. 1,
Want -exchange 4 lbs. mixed
pecans for 4 print sacks alike;
Also 4 lbs. pecans, mixed, for |
gal. Sunflower seed. Mrs. W.
W. Mason, Byron, Rt. 1.
Want exchange choice Pa-
pershell pecans for print wash-
ed 100 lb. feed sacks, 1 lb. nuts
postage. J. D. Powell,
gerald, Box 529.
Want exchange 4 Ibs. Stuart
pecans for 4 print sacks, 100 lb.
cap., alike; Also have English
Pea seed, cold proof, 35c Ib.
Add ponies. Mrs. Fred Atkin-
son, Valdosta, Rt.: 4. ;
Fitz-
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
FEATHERS: a
About 25 lbs. goose feathers.
Make best offer, Nellie Paulk,
Wray, Rt. 2.
Nice, new white feathers, 70c
lb. del. Sample on request.
Mrs. Mary Collins, Gainesville,
Rte t:
FRUIT (FRESH AND DRIED):
Nice cooking apples, dried,
free of forms and core, 35 lb.;
Also nice Budded pecans, 35c
lb. PP in Georgia. Mrs. J. H.
Lawrence, Middleton. *
Nice, Sundried apples, 50c
Ib. postpaid. Mrs. B. C. Mc-
Clure, Rolston.
ROOTS AND HERBS:
Sarsaparilla Root and Sassa-
fras, 3 Ibs., $1. Add postage.
Mrs. Sibley Richardson, Hart-
well, Rt. 3.
SAGE:
Nice hand picked Dry Sage,
$1. pint cupful. Mrs. Marie
Holland, Dalton, Rt. 2.
Good quality sage; 90c gal.;
25c qt. PP; Also Peanuts, $2.
Pk. Miss Vivian Smith, White,
Rit.
About 3 lbs. Sage, $1.25 lb.
Add postage. Ruth MeDaris,
Rydal, Rt. 2.
COMPOST:
Sev. truckloads of cow com-
post for sale. Call 2-7883. Mrs.
umming, Rt. 4,
ea. PP. No COD. Mrs. Hoyt
Thurston Poteet, Culberson, N.!
good cond. Mrs. A. M. Lane,|
for each sack; Or half pound}. When I read the letter you had in the bulle
for ea. white sack. Each pay |
knowing the mind of the Dicator as he di
_ Creator further knowing the mind of the Dic-
_keep up the good work. We can fight for
Ruby James, Macon, 4197 Wor-
sham Ave. aoe a
= _ Barwick, Georgia
Hon. Tom Linder, Commissioner AG., __
Capitol, : ; us
Ailanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Linder:
Permit me to congratulate you on you
move as Commissioner, to say, that your at-
tempts to get foods cleaned up for the best
interests of the masses in Georgia is one of the
greatesi benefits to mankind. tion Silas
Grocery and Super-Markets have loaded
shelves of Prem, Spam, and Fray Be:
tosMeat products that have been load
with Sodium Sulphite for the purpose of
Embalming the product without benefit
the consumer thereof. Possibly this is muc
against the rules of Health, but we who ha
studied the dangerous effects of modern foo
that have been processed by the use of Chemi.
cals and other Artificials, are happy to not
the trend you are taking, that of protectin
those who do not know how to protect them
selves in this onslaught for more PROFITS.
It is significant that many Backwar
Nations have long since taken steps that pro-
hibit importation of many American F
Products just because they are taking bett
care of their populations in the- matter of
Health than we are. Le ; ae
_ Probably few know Americans are a]
lowed to use and to process and sell Foo
with the highest rating of dangerous preservz
lives, poisonous residues, sprays and dusts
anywhere in the World, and that our once
good laws put into effect by the orders of Dr.
Wiley, have been perverted and changed until
now it is an almost obsolete number. _
More people are becoming acutely awa:
of this, and boycotting these Murderous for
Profit products, perhaps in great part 2
cause of this even our Military Services fi
it difficult to find healthy and normal men
bers for their outfits. SSeS seer
Respecifully,
R. A. Caldwell
=
: Quitman, Georgi
Hon. Tom Linder oe
Commissioner of Agriculiure
State Capitol =
Atlanta, Georgia SG
Dear Mr. Linder: -
I was caused to write some too. In ord
know who your enemy is, you first have i
know how to identify the enemy. I heard
greai man say he was in favor of four free
.doms. There is only one freedom and that is
to be Free in Deed. And Free in Deed means
to do things after the council of your own will
and not to be bound under the hand of the
Dictator and his busy-bodies. The Creato
told the people not to suffer as a busybod:
other mens matiers. ae
Who is a Dictator? A Dicator is any man wh
seeks all the power. How does he get the
power he wants? He has first got to deceive
the people. How does he deceive? He pro-
mises health, peace and wealth. So the
tator as he did said that when men cry peace
sudden distruction shall follow. Sioa
We are taught not to quinch the Spirit so you
boys at home while they fight for us over
there. : es
T. N.. Stallings
i - LaGrange,Georgia
Hon. Tom Linder te ee
Commissioner Agriculture ;
Atlanta, Georgia 5
Dear Mr. Linder: ~ SRS oh
Many times after reading your various
articles in the Market Bulletin, I think that
I will write and commend you for writit
such needed and inspiring information. Ps
All recent copies have been so timely
and so well expressed. I pray they will awaken
many minds and create a greater determina-
tion to see that a FEW will not be longer
lowed to take away our God given rights.
The many good letters you published
show that not ALL are satisfied with being
sold down the creek,
In spite of all your stamina, it must
very trying to have to take your valuable tim:
for rebuttal to such common criticism
was brought out in last issue of the Bull
I admire your ability of the come ba cs",
attribute it to the strength of character y
*
eighboring
Tan-Winkle
more and
. his dog
by un-
| rode ve
Water Ground, organically
grown, untreated yellow Corn
Meal of high flavor and nu-
tritional value, freshly ground
on order and mailed, 12 lhb.;
10 Ibs., $1.00; 50 lbs., $4. here.
J. S. Darnall, Cleveland, Rt. 3.
State cert. and passed Bunch
P. R. Seed Potatoes. Can be
| seen in curing house from Jan.
|1-March Ist., $4. bu. See or
write: Mike W.
Preston, Jr.,
Buena Vista.
epSYRUPS*)'7
New Ga. Cane syrup, 12
short qt. bottles per case, $4.
FOB at my place, Hwy. 67. S.
J. Foss, Brooklett, Rt. I.
TOBACCO:
Ga. raised, flue cured, 1951
-erop\ tobacco: chewing, 5 lbs.,
| $1.50; smoking, 6 lbs., $1.50. PP
in Ga. M. B. Swain, Alma, Rt.
ae
tL
HOGS FOR SALE.
HOGS FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
CANE:
Want 1000-1500 Red Ribbon
Cane. W. C. Suggs, St. George.
GRAIN AND HAY:
-Want good quality hay, 20-
30 tons. State price, kind, quali-
ty delivered our farms near
Barnesville. Tel. 73. D. C. Col-
lier, Barnesville.
- Want price on Kudzu and.
Soy Bean Hay delivered. Rob-
ert Earle Greene, Blue Ridge.
Want price on Peanut Hay,
FOB, RR car. George Taliafer-
ro, Blue Ridge.
Want 3 bu. good, well clean-
ed wheat, not treated E. E.
Key, Ellijay, Rt. 4.
Want up to 300 bushels good,
sound feed oats, no mold, rea-
sonable price; also 150 bu.
Combine Run Wheat. Idus Har-
rison, Cornelia.
HONEY, BEES, ETC.:
Want 15-30 Hives Honey
bees. State price. R. E. Sikes,
LaGrange, 109 Cherry St.
Want Honey Extractor, strain-
er, Bee Hives, Bee Moving
screens.. Loren F. Miller, Mel-
drim.
SEED POTATOES:
Want 10 bu. P. R. Sweet Po-
tato Seed: State price. E. M.
Herrm, Manor.
SYRUP: : cee:
_ Want several gallons . Old
Time Syrup, made from Old
Time Ga. Cane; Also want few
Old Time Cane Seed. Billy
Sirman, Valdosta, P. O. Box
Deena
CATTLE FOR SALE
\
41/2 gal. milk Blue Jersey,
850 lbs., freshen 3rd calf Feb.
20, 1952, $270. Come after. A.
W. Scroggins, Musella.
3 reg. Hereford bulls, 1 yr.
old, horned type, $250. ea. Ee.
cil Travis; Riverdale. ~
Reg. Horned Hereford bull
from one of best herds in the
South, from Wilton and Mis-
| chief stock, 18 mos. old, approx.
1100 lbs,, for sale. James Veal,
Cedartown, Rt. 3.
2 choice reg. Red Poll Heif-
ers, 7 and 9 mos. old,
breeding, also 2 reg. Shorthorn
bulls, 7 and 10. mos. old, 1
white, 1 red} best. of. bloodlines.
Ray McDonald, Oakwood.
Reg. Polled Hereford bulls,
Domino strain, ready for serv-
ice T. M. Biggers, Conyers.
Reg. Guernsey Heifer, 10
mos. old, $185.00; 3 reg. Guern-
sey bulls, 2 old enough for
service, $150. ea. Phone Ros-
well 4442. Ralph Dangar, Wood-
stock.
Angus bull, 900 Ibs., for sale
or trade for hay, W. A. Doug-
las, Wrightsville.
_ Young Jersey Cow, and Hol-
$300.00; Also 4 yr. old mare,
ans. R. J. Williams, Jesup, Rt.
1, Box 32, ee
exc,
stein Heifer (bred), both for|
little, $125. Letters.
3 fresh cows, 3 heavy spring-
ers, 3 other springers, for sale.
Walker Waldrep, Forsyth, Rt.
1. Phone 6209.
Reg. Holstein bulls of breed-
ing age, Grandsons of Pabst
Roamer, Dams records up to
14,000 lbs. milk, 500 lbs. fat.
Curtis Avery, Jr., West Point.
Phone LaGrange 8824,
Several good registered horn
type Hereford bulls, 12-18 mos.
old, $600.-$1500. ea. See before
buying, Percy A. Price, Lees-
burg, Rt. 1.
One fat thoroughbred White
Face bull, 2 yrs. old, now in
service, $300. Mrs. Bessie Whit-
He Midland, Pierce Chapel
Black Angus bull, 3 yrs. old,
purebred but not registered;
fine for Grade herd, $400. E. F.
Carlisle, Griffin. ie
4 mos. old thoroughbred Hol-
stein bull calf, not registered,
$100. if taken at once. Tel. 3111.
O. R. Cheek, Conyers, Rt. 3.
White Face Red Heifer, 3
mos. old, 500 lbs., subj. to reg-
ister, 5 gal. Guernsey cow and
Reg. Hereford, $150. here. 4
mi. S. Reidsville. Cary Jordan,
Manassas, Rt. I. .
Reg. Dbl. Standard Polled
bull, approx. 14 mos. old, exc.
conformation, _ medium _ size,
built low, sired by Aster Domi-
no II, reasonable price. Tel. 73.
Apply: D. C. Collier, Barnes-
ville. es
Holstein bull, 7 yrs. old, car-
nation bloodline, purebred, not
registered, selling to prevent
inbreeding, no bad habits, too
good to slaughter, bargain $350.
J. N. Hogg, West Point, P. O.
Box 13.
4 purebred Holstein bulls,
approx. 6 mos. old, from heif-
ers on which both sire and dam
have proven records. Contact:
W. C. Harris, Winder, Ga.,/or
Dana Harris, Braselton, Rt. 1,
Care Pine Ridge Dairy Farm,
Jersey male, wt. 350 lbs., 15
mos. old, short type, $70. at
my farm. Can give papers. E.
T. Mathis, Avera. (Near
Grange). ;
sgcepesenepieneeepeens Saas eel
HOGS FOR SALE
OIC Boar, 4 mos. old, approx.
85 lbs., subj. to register, $40.00.
Will ship. G. B, Hattaway, Tal-
botton, Rt. 4. ee
OIC Pigs, Shoats, Gilts, or
Bred Sows, top quality and
breeding. U. S. Hwy. 78, to
Possum Lake near Stone Moun-
tain, follow signs to Oraland
Farm. W. J. Lyle, Lilburn, Rt.
15
tR Purebred PC Sow, 400 Ibs.,
farrow soon, $100. if taken now.
Also other hogs for sale. See.
Mrs. Raymond. Robinson,
Greenville.
1 Reg. Duroe Male Shoat,
$20. Also taking orders for
crosses. W. H. Gazaway, Alpha-
retta, Rt. 3. (Birmingham Com-
munity). .
3 purebred Hampshire Gilts,
farrowed March 16, 1951, all
bred to farrow in Feb., 1952.
Reg. in buyers name, $50. ea.
J.-C. Herron, Martin, Rt. 1.
Blocky type Duroe males and
females, 4 mos. old, wormed,
treated for cholera, crated, reg.
buyers name, $35. ea. FOB.
James H. Braziel, Jr., Voe.
Agri. Teacher, Lyons.
Blocky type Durocs, males
and females, 4 mos. old, worm-
ed, treated, crated, reg., $35.00
ea. FOB; 1 Reg. Duroc male, 2
yrs. old, about 500 Ibs., $60. at
farm. Kenneth Flanders, Lyons.
Purebred Tamworth, pigs,
males, gilts, and sows, all subj-
to register, very best breeding
herd, out of litters producing
corn belt show winners, rea-
sonable prices. Charles Bald-
win, Suwanee.
SPC. Gilts, some of the best
in the breed, bred to top boar
by Distinction. M. J. Blackmon,
Pinehurst.
Fine SPC pigs, males and
gilts, champion _ bloodlines,
cholera immune, $45,-$50, Reg-
istered in buyer's name. C, R.
Morgan, Americus, Rt. 4..
One purebred Hampshire
Boar, 1 yr. old August, 1951.
John F. Greear, Helen. (White
Co.; -Ga,): a
Several reg. Hampshire boars
and gilts, $25. and $35. ea.;
Can furnish unrelated pairs:
Also 2 Bred Gilts, $75. ea. Will
ship. J. W. Watson, Alpharetta,
Rt. 1, Box 340.
OIC male, 17 mos. -old, reg-
istered, $75. FOB. J. N. Mitch-
ell, Forsyth.
23 purebred reg. Duroc pigs,
9 wks. old, $25. ea. 7 mi. N, E.
Ashburn. Newell Rainey, Ash-
burns Rt 42:
Purebred Sows and Gilts,
Ist and 2nd litters, OIC, Du-
roc, SPC, PC, and Yorkshire,
also pigs, 8-14 wks. old, OIC
Sow and litter; purebred Du-
roc Boar, 300 lbs. George
ue Lithonia, Rt. 2. Phone
5431.
Some outstanding reg. Du-
roc pigs, male and_ female,
ready for delivery, $25. ea. Pa-
pers in buyers name. Ship
anywhere Express Collect.
Crates returned. J. A. Brown,
Felton, Rt. 1.
Reg. OIC Boar, 2 yrs. old,
about 500 lbs. $60.00: 8 wks.
old pigs, same breed, subj. to
register, $10. ea.; Shoats, rea-
sonably priced. At farm only.
H. G. Autry, Plainville.
2 Reg. Duroe Boars, one 2
yrs. old, top quality, guar. pro-
ducer, $100.00; Other, 8 mos.
old, $50. Seco Lo Down breed-
ing, excellent color and con-
formation. Guaranteed. J. H.
Donaldson, Fort Valley, Rt. 1.
SPC pigs, from Gold Star
litters, both sexes, ready for
April and May breeding, about
125 lbs., choice breeding stock,
$45.-$50. ea. Ship anywhere. L.
G. Owensby, Tennille, Rt. 2.
Reg. SPC Gilts, bred to reg.
Berkshire Boar, $75. at farm;
Also other bred hogs. Roger S.
Cobb, Marietta, Box. 304.
10 brood sows, OIC-PC cross-
ed, bred for Feb. and Mar. far-
rowing, for sale. Ist house off
Childress Dr. on McMurray.
Mrs. J. E. Carter, Atlanta, Rt.
4, Box 487.
' Reg. Duroc pigs, 9 wks. old,
9 in litter, $25. ea. with papers
in buyers name; One Reg. Du-
roc Brood Sow, 2 yrs. old, good
producer, gentle, $100., er trade
for heavier yearlings of same
value. J. A. Brown, Felton, Rt.
2 OIC hogs, Sow and Boar, 6
mos. old, around 250 lbs. each,
both entitled to register, for
ery W. C. Meadors, Cleveland,
tesrs
Reg. OIC Pits, 10 wks. old,
extra nice, 2 males, 4 females,
$17.50 ea. Phone 1571 Wl. E.
J. Shirley, Gainesville, Rt. 7.
Registry of Merit SPC pigs,
sired by top son of Grand
Master, cholera immuned,
wormed, crated, recorded free,
$35. and $40. ea. FOB. James
A. Yancey, Austell, Rt. 2.
One Boar, 3/4 Big Bone
Guinea, 1/4 SPC, about 260
lbs., 3 yrs. old, for sale or exch.
for White Chester Boar. Mar-
vin F. Tillman, Glenwood, Rt.
1.
Black African Big Bone
Guinea pigs, 6-8 wks. old, stay
fat kind, reg. in buyers name,
unrelated pairs; males, $20.00;
females, $18.50. Phone 2878 W.
Will Dixon, Athens, 250 Hill-
side St.
One reg. OIC Sow, about 400
lbs., bred to reg. SPC, $85.00;
OIC Shoats, about 90 Ibs., $40.
Subj. to register. Jack Lane,
Fitzgerald, Rt. 4. :
Some 8 wks. old big bone
Guinea pigs, boars, $18. ea.;
gilts, $15. ea.; also two 4 mos.
old boars, approx. wt. 110 Ibs.,
$35. ea. All pigs, reg. buyers
name. Buyer pay = shipping
chrgs.; ship anywhere. J. C.
Sosebee, Jr., Talmo, Rt. 1.
* Young Hampshire male about
125 lbs., also bred Hamp. Sows
at reasonable prices. O. S. Dug-
gan, Chester.
4 OIC Sow Pigs, good stock,
farrowed Oct. 12, 1951, $15. ea.
Vaccinated and registered in
buyers mame. Charlie Black-
well, Bogart, P. O. Box 93.
OIC Gilt Pigs, short nose,
blocky, 9 wks. old, $22.50 ea, ~
at my home; $25. ea. shipped;
light |
Also Boars, ready for
service, $50. ea. if shipped. All
reg. in buyers name. J. H.
Roquemore, Americus, Rt. 2.
Reg. Big Bone Guinea Shoats,
few Gilts (mostly ready te
breed), $35. ea.; 3 mos. old Pigs,
$25. ea. Dbl. treated reg. buyers
name. Ship anywhere. Leon
Watson, Unadilla, Box 214.
10 OIC and SPC Pigs, large,
thrifty, 8 wks., old, $10. ea.;
Lot for $90. Phone 8-7877. J.
K. Stalcup, Marietta, Rt. 5.
17 Hampshire: Pigs, 5 wks.-
3 mos. old, sow and boars, reg.
in buyer's name, $25. crated
(erates returned); $20. at my
home. J. O. Colclough, Robin-
son.
Few fine 6 mos. old Gilts,
about 100 Ibs. sire reg. Duroe
Jersey, dam, part PC. J. J.
Waters, Louisville.
Reg. Hereford Male Pigs, 3
mos. old, $35.; One Reg. Here-
ford Male, 10 mos. old $60. C. M.
Lane, Colquitt.
7 bred Gilts and Sows, dif-
ferent breeds, due farrow Feb.,
Ist, for sale, 9 mi. E. Monte-
zuma just off Route 26. Also 1
Hereford Feeder Bull, and Red
Duram Steer (wt. about 450
lbs.). Alvin Asmus, Montezuma.
Gilt, 9 mos. old, bred, far-
row Mar. 2nd., good bloodlines,
bred to Grandson of Star Bland,
$70.; few open Gilts, 6 and 7
mos. old, $40. and $50. All
registered in United Duroc Rec-
ord Assoc., buyers name. Phone
1443J. James E. Taylor, Way-
cross, Rt. 1, Sunnyside Dr.
Reg. Black PC Choice Gilts,
9 mos. old, over 250 lbs., open
$85. ea: Bred $100.; Choice
Boars and Gilts, 4 1/2 mos. ol
100 Ibs. up, $35.; 9 wks. ol
Boars and Gilts, $25. ea. A
life treated. C. Elliott West,
Cuthbert.
Reg. Duroc Pigs, ready t
take away Jan. 20th, Sire Re
Flash, Univ. of Ga. boar. Odig
Johnson, Summerville, Rt. 1.
8 reg. SPC Pigs, 3 mos. old,
backed by prize winning a
treated for cholera and wormed,
$30. ea. at farm, 12 mi. No
Alma. Lamar Altman, Alma, Rt.
i
Duroc Boar ready for service,
also Duroc Pigs, both sex, subj,
to register. Phone 538-M4. Billy
Sirman, Valdosta, POB 522.
HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE
SN,
2 mules, about 900-1000 Ibs.,
also one 2 H wagon. All in
good shape, for $200. W. GC.
Johnson, Lumpkin.
Middleage mare mule, ae
round 1100 lbs., good qualities,
for sale just outside Austell on
railrgad headed toward Douge
lasville. M. B. Smith, Aiotel
Box 8.
8 good mules, 1150-1200 Ibs
for sale. O. M. Bush, Barnette
ville, /
Bay mare, 7 yrs. old, gentle,
work anywhere, 1500-1600 Ibs.,
$150. at my barn on West
Washington Road. Tom Kite,
College Park, Rt. 2, Box 388.
8 yr. old Saddle and Harness
Horse, work anywhere, gentle,
$90. (bargain) or trade for corn.
Fred D. Shivers, Augusta, 2744
Milledgeville Rd.
Good farm mule, around 1,=
000 lbs., 11 yrs. old, $50. ets
Laura Dudley, Warthen, Rt. 2.
Red Horse Mare with whit
spot in forehead, marked an
made up well, round, fat, gen-
tle, will ride and work any-
where, about. 1350 lbs., 7 yrs.
old this Spring, $100.00 at my
barn. F. M. Powell, Stock-
bridge, Rt. 1.
1 pair good farm mules, a-
bout 1000 lbs., cheap, or trad
for heifers. J. D. Henderson,
Marietta, Rt. 4.
One A- farm mule, 11 yrg.
old, 1100 Ibs., $40.00; Also Rids
ing Cultivator, Cole Corn
planter, other plows, cheap. A.
F. Crosby, Bristol, Rt. 1.
- SHEEP & GOATS
FOR saAEE
Red Horse mule, 1100 lbs., 9
yrs. old, gentle, work any-
where, for sale or trade for
cow. W. O. Saylors, Whites-
burg, Rt. 1, near Hutchins Fer-
Ty.
RABBITS AND CAVIES
FOR SALE
Virgin Does, breeding age,
NZW and Californians, ped.
stock, $5. to $8. ea. with papers;
Calif, Cross Hybrid, $4, ea.
Does and bucks, FOB. Will
: breed before shipping. Lee
Duenckel, Milledgeville, 750 N.
Columbia.
Four 2 mos. old Bucks, cross
breed having Giant Chinchilla,
Checkered Giant, and NZ Red
bloodlines, $1.75 ea. Express
Collect. J. H. Smith, Molena.
NZW Chinchillas from reg.
stock doe, bred or unbred,
young rabbits, 8 wks. old up,
_ for meat or breeding stock. Let-
ters ans. J. R. Lawson, Social
Cirele. Phone 149-W.
Heavy Wt. Chinchilla, NZW
rabbits, 6 mos. old, $2.50 ea.;
$4.75 Pr.; $7. trio; $40. for lot
of 15; 1-2 yrs. old, $3.50 ea.; $6.
- Pr.; 2 mos. old, $1.50 ea.; $4.00
os onan .75 Pr. David Park, Al-
Ri Bs
a Wt. Chinchilla Jato:
Does, $2.00-$2.50 eas 1 Buck,
18 mos. old, $4.00; 10 mos. old
Buck, $2.50. . P. Foster, Good
Hope.
so NZW, exclusively ped. stock,
_ good bone and type, large lit-
ters, heavy milkers, satis. guar.
Walker E. Smith, Atlanta, 2684
Collier Dr. RA 9990.
California Rabbits, 6 does
breeding age, 1 buck, $25. for
lot; Pair Black and White
Dutch,
5 White Dutch, $4. Pr. Vince
oa Wheeler, Atlanta, 2195 Che-
=A,
shire Bridge Rd., N. E. Phone.
EX 3237.
_ Mashburn, Cumming, Rt. 5..
Ped. Californians, ready se
breeding, bucks, $4.00; does,
$6.50; Pair, $10.00; Trio, $16.50.
Ship promptly, No . checks.
Stuart Lewis, Atlanta, 1264
Cumberland Rd. VE 1072.
Rabbits, 40 does, 3 bucks, 50
fryers, several others weaned
and several baby rabbits, my
place, 4 mi. NE Rockmart. L.
_ W. Spinks, Rockmart, Rt. 1.
; Junior and Senior Heavy Wt.
ed Chinchillas, from ped. stock,
from good milkers, and pro-
ducers. Letters ans, John L.
Parrott, Macon, 2366 Miller
Field Rd., Rt. 6.
N. Z. Reds: bucks, 5 mos,
old, $4. ea.; does and 2 bucks,
2 mos. old, $4. pr., $2.50 ea.;
good breeding stock, 2 mos. old,
j $2, ea. All stock ped. Shippin
__ chrgs. collect. No COD, Mrs. ~
~"\ W. Bartlett, Atlanta,
Wesley Rd., N. W.
Choice ped. Giant Chinchil-
las, Wing Ridge Wonder Boy
bloodlines, bucks from separate
litters, immediate del. 8-12
wks. old, Juniors, $4, ea. Buck
or Doe, Papers furnished. Robt.
P, Middleton, Austell, P. O.
Box 357.
2 nice Calif. Bucks of show
type, 5 mos. old, $6.50 and
$7.50, Phone Dixie 8890. L. J.
seeroney, Atlanta, 924 _ Paoli
ee 680 W.
Ave., S.
oo NZW, 4 mos. old,
$3.00 ea.; 40, $100. Half bucks
and half does, Mrs, C. T. Mash-
burn, Rebecca, Rt. 1.
Super-Wooler Angora Rab-
bits, selected breeding stock,
Juniors, $5. Pr. Express collect.
Satis. guaranteed. Letters an-
swered. Robert E. Smith, Ce-
dartown, 623 Martha Lane.
SHEEP & GOATS
FOR SALE
and Pair Brown andj
-|rietta, Rt.
Milk Goats, heavy milkers,
to freshen in February, March,
and April, also reg. Saanan
Buck at stud. S. J. Griener,
Atlanta, R. F, D. 14, Box 198.
1 Toggenberg Milk Goat, 5
qt., just turned dry, freshen
soon, cheap or trade for young
calf. P. A. Booker, Ellenwood,
Rt. 1, Flakes Mill Rd. Phone
Stockbridge 3173,
qf
White Saanan, bred, 2
first kidding, 1 tog ready
breed, 5 qts. last kidding, $20,
ea.; Both for $35, Exch. for
young calf. Mrs. Ralph Buley,
Lithia Springs, P, O, Box 18.
2 Toggenberg Milk Goats,
purebred but not registered, 5
and 6 qts., per day, 1 Nubian
Milk Goat, 4 qts., also others,
all to freshen between Feb. 20-
28. Come after. Leon Watson,
Reg. Toggenberg 1 yr. old
Buck, $25.00; Good Grade
Saanan 5 qt. milker, $35.00;
Several good grade Saanan, ee
4 qt. milkers, $20. ea. All to
freshen within next month or
two. Come after. Grady W.
Garland, Jr., Toccoa, Box 331.
LIVESTOCK WANTED
7
CATTLE:
Want to exchange good Plug |
Mules for a weaned Heifer
Calf. Contact. Mrs. C. C. Car-
tee, Dallas, R. F. D. 1.
GOATS:
Want nice young Billy Goat,
milk type, old enough for serv-
ice, Saanan preferred. S. L.
sash Sr., Social Circle, Box
3
Want one milk goat, er
giving at least 1 gal. daily. G
L. Durden, Macon, 5017 Bloom-
mield Rd.
HOGS:.
Want Durocs, male pig or
shoat, within 35 mi, Sylvania.
pe Bragg, Sylvania, Box
ee to exchange SPC Boar,
125 lbs., med. build type, of
little of 13-pigs for same quali-
ty SPC Boar, to prevent in-
Selected _ ped. NZW and| breeding. J. M. Colston, Kite,
_ Chinchilla Breeding Does, $4,| Rt 1.
ea. Plus postage. Mrs. Otis!) HORSES AND MULES:
Want to trade reg. Blk. PC
Choice Gilt, 9 mos. old, or 41/2
mos. Boars and Gilts over 100
lbs. or 9 wks. old pigs, life
treated, for Saddle Horse for
riding or driving. J. S. West,
Cuthbert, Rt. 2.
Want to exch. one mule colt,
21/2 yrs. old, for saddle horse
not over 6. yrs. old, around 700-
8000 lbs. D. R. Flynt, Lincoln-
ton,
Want to buy in Conyers area,
a team of mules and farm
equipment for 2 H farm, in-
eluding mower, disc harrow,
wagon, plows, etc. Phone Cr.|
8401. G. M. Anderson, Decatur,
149 Mt. Vernon Dr.
CATTLE:
Want: buy 10-15 Reg. Polled
Hereford heifers of abou
breeding age. C. E. Carter, Ma-
6. Phone 8-1861.
HOGS: f
Want 2 weaned, purebred
Hampshire gilts. Advise Weer.
ticulars.' Quintoh Paulk, Wra
GOATS:
Want to buy or rent one
good breed Billy goat by Mar.
1st. Contact. Lockard Bell, AS
lanta, 2677 Pharr Rd. N.
CR 4390.
Want some common goats at
reasonable price. Contact. J. R.
Sloan, Pelham, Rt. 1. Phone
No. 6524,
POULTRY FOR SALE
|mated and working,
CORNISH, GAMES, GIANTS
White Cornish Roosters, 51
hatch, and Apr, hatch pullets,
$2.50 ea, Mrs, R, K. Pruitt, La-
vonia, Rt, 2.
Round Head Stags from a
winning cock, 4 lbs. up, $4.
up, Write for information and
description, Jasper Floyd, El-
berton, Rt. 3.
25 Jersey White Giant pul-
lets, 10 mos. old, best egg
grade, laying, good healthy
stock, $2. ea, Come after or
send coops. Geo. D, Barfield,
Louisville, Rt. 3.
~
6 Brood hens and cock, 3
yrs. old, direct Pierce stock,
also stags in Gussette- Shaw!
Cross, hens, $2.50; Stags, $3,00-
$5.00. Exchange some for pheas-
ants. D. D. Haywood, Barnes-
ville, 141 Cherry St.
2 fine Cockerels, Cornish In-
dian, $1.75 ea.; One 1951 hatch
rooster, $2,00; 1 or 2 pullets,
same breed, $1.75 ea. FOB.
Mrs, B. H. Osburn, Roy.
5 nice Round Head and Shuf-
fler Game Stags, 21/2-31/2
lbs., $10. for lote Mis. Marie
Holland, Dalton, Rt. .
15 black*Cornish hens, 1 yr.
old, 1 rooster (same breed),
$30, FOB. P, O. Money Order.
Mrs. Ruby Branch, Gresham-
ville.
Purebred White Cornish
Roosters and few hens, from
prize winning stock, $2.50 ea.
Bis: OQ. L. Craft, Lavonia, Rt.
1 Rooster, 4 hens, Round-
house-Warhorse cross, about 18
mos. old, in good condition,
ei. Daniel B. Gates, Winston,
2 Stags (looks like cocks),
1/2 WC Blue, 1/2 BR, untrim-
$8, for both. Send MO. You
pay express charges: a Mc-
Bride, Rockmart, Rt. 1
(Brown Red), April hatch,
guaranteed pure. Letters ans.
Sam Pelfry, Dalton, Rt. 1.
Purebred White Cornish
Roosters, 51 hatch, from prize
winning stock, $2.50 ea. Mrs.
. H, Walters, Lavonia, Rt, 2.
Mes Pit Game Stags, two White
-|Hackles, two RH-Leopard,
ready to walk, $3. ea. C> L.
Griffin, Gainesville, Oak St.
Cocks and a few hens, $12,
Pr.; $3. and $5. ea.; Pen 4 hens,
1 cock, $25.00; Pen 3 hens, 1
cock, $20.00; 2 hens, 1 cock,
$11.00; Stags, $3. and $4. ea.
FOB. Phone 5404. L, 0. Bne-
field, Cedartown, Rt.
Pure . A. Ginn oan young
2, $5.00; Small Cocks, $8.-$10.
ea. Still on farm walks. L. T.
Vaughn, Royston, RFD 2.
Pure Bacon Warhorse and
Wingate Brown Red St
$5.-$7.50 ea. Few hens, $5 00:
Pullets, $3.50 ea. C. C, Pollard,
Augusta, Sand Bar Ferry Rd.
PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, QUAIL
DOVES, ETC.:
Blue Peafowls: 2. pair 1951
hatch, $35, Pr.; 2 Prs., cocks,
50 hatch, hens 51 hatch, $40.
Pair. FOB. Mrs. J: R. Raines,
Cordele, Rt. 1.
Nice Bob White Quail,
ea, C. Whit Turner, MeDon-
| ough.
12 pairs White King oe
r,s
$30. for lot. C, R. Summers,
Tifton, Rt. 3.
Pen raised: Georgia Bob
White Quail, $7. Pr.; 3 prs. $20.;
Chinese and Mongolian Ring-
neck Pheasants, full plumage,
$8. Pr. 2 Prs., $15.00; Ban-
tams: Old English Game Mod-
ern, 4 hens, 1 cock, $12.50;
Show t. BR, 4 hens, 1 cock,
$12.50. Mrs. Helen Street, At-
lanta, Rt. 2, 2956 Buford Hwy.
Che tter:
Ringneck Pheasants, $5. Pr.
W. D. Bennett, Molena.
Chinese Ringneck Pheasants,
hens or cocks, $2.50 ea.; Trio
of Whites, $9.00; Mutants, $6.
Pr.; Golden Pheasants, $12.00
trio; Chukar Quail, $9. Pr.
Wild Mallards, $6. trio; All 51
hatch. MO or Cashiers check,
Harry A. Wasden, M. D., Quit-
man.
Common Pigeons, $1, Pr, Or
exch, 1 pane for Bantam hen, 2
Prs. for 1 Bantam rooster; Al-
so want 1 Silver King Male
Pigeon. Give price at once
Starling Yawn, Byromville.
25 full grown Quail, good
color, fast on wing, good size,
6 mos. old, $45. plus shipping
charges. I. W. Foster, Atlanta,
8 Ridgeway Ave., N. W.
Ringneck Daves $5. pr. Will
ship. A. Horne, Shellman,
Box 30:
med farm walked, Dead Game,
Pit Game Cocks and Hens
hens, $3.50 ea.; 2, $6.00; ullsia, shi
-|mixed pigeons, $1. pr. R. 3
$2.| Kenerley, LaGrange, 100 =e in
fowl, pairs and cacks only. Sell
$10. Pr.; Ringnecks, Ji Pr,;
Ringneck hens, $4. ea. D. Ken-
nedy, Quitman, Rt. 2.
ANCONAS, AUSTROLOPE
Black Austrolope Cockerels,
March hatch, bought direct
from Osborne in Michigan,
some of his finest laying strain,
ship. Mrs. J. A. Camp, Roberta.
50 Ancona hens, 10 mos. old,
laying, no culls, Siebs strain,
$2. ea. Come after. Mrs.
Creech, Graymont, Rt. 1.
BANTAMS:
Golden Sebright roosters,
$1.50 ea. 2, $2.50; also Silver
Duck Wing rooster, $3.50; 1
fine Silver Sebright rooster, $4.
Also want some Old Eng, game
pantan and Duck Wing hens.
R. Statham, Griffin, Rt. 5,
Box A 88,
ish and Brown Leghorn Ban-
tams, $3. ea. up. Bob Clark,
Macon, 372 Spring St. -
RI Red Bantams, $4. Pr;
White Silkies, $5.-$7.50 Pr. ac-
cording to quality; Also sev-
eral other breeds for sale. B.
/H. Holsomback, East Point,
302 S..darris St.
Buff Cochin bantams, Show
birds, $4.50 trio, FOB. Money}
Order. Joe J. Wilson, Decatur,
*
828 Third Ave., DE 0354.
HAMBURGS:
purebred, some laying, $1. 50
ea. or trade for goo hog,
weighing about 150 lbs. Harry
Sanford, Dalton; Care S & S
| Waste Co,
LEGHORNS:
100 AAAA Master 1
White Leghorn hens, layi
Mated
10
Pet, $1.75 ea. at my place.
oe - alcolm, Madi-|T
son, Rt. 4
15 Butt Leghorn Abr 4
A grade, and 3 BR hens, $2.00
ea.; Lot at $1.75 ea. wil not
ip. Mrs. Grace Broddy,
Swainsboro, Rt. 3, Box 256._
300 purebred Leghorn Cross-
s, laying, and 250-300 Berrys
Gold, starting to lay, $1. " ea.
FOB. H. L. Jones, Dulu
PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, QUAIL, ETC.:
Full blooded Homer and
White King pigeons, also 2 pr
White Fantails, banded a
working, for sale. G. W. Wil-
liams, Columbus, Re Z,
diams Dairy.
White Kings, $2.50 pr.; Black
Fantails, Show Type. $3. ae
tree St.
MINORCAS & MISC.
CHICK
ae jee Minorca Cock-
erels and Pullets, $3. and $5.
ri Also setting eggs, $2.25 per
5. PP. L, B, Millians, Newnan.
2 young Cockerels, one
hatch, of good breed, $1.50 ea.
at my house. Mrs. Heary Lam-
bert, Greymont, Rt.
REDS:
Young, Productive or Par-
menter Red hens, bred to lay,
now laying, Blue Ribbon win-
ners: at entral Ga. Fair and
2 young, same stock roosters,
$3. ea. M, O, te ed in light
erates. Mrs. R. anders, Vi-
enna.
| 1 extra fine pen R. I. Reds,
mated up, for. sale; ee cock
and 12 pullets, $50. T. W. Na-
tions, Atlanta, Rt. 4, Box 521.
Approximately 100 N. H. pul-
lets, 5 mos. old, $1.50 ea, my
place, a ht off Rockbridge Rd.,
2 mi. Pine Lake. Cc. Ward,
Stone Mountain, ne 1. Phone
No. 6862,
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, ETC.:
About 25 pr. Speckled and
White guineas, 1951 hatch, $3.
pr. FOB or swap for Bull Dog
and Cornish game hens and 2
roosters. R. E. Schoeppel, Way-
eross, Rt. 2, Box re
1 young 1951 M,
Tom, nice for decante
Turkey
$15.,
E. Faircloth, Pulaski.
aot hatch Blue India Pea-
or exchange for corn or hay.
Z. J. Lee, Red Oak.
Golden Pheasants, 51 hatch,
Dora
Golden Sebrights, Dark Corn-
20 Young Hamburg hie ;
"| $1. ea,
Wil- |
eys, 5-6 lbs
cond.,, eee ea, at my
not ship. Mrs. M.
burn, Campbellton 1
21 colored Ducks (
5 drakes), also 3 la
Pekin Drakes, $20.00,
gid re Garrett, Cave
28 White
mostly hens, $2.50 ea,
ship. Wilson Carson,
$3, ea. If you send crates to} Ric
ner Ducks, lay every
season, $4.50 trio.
press COD. D. C. K
gusta, Rt. 4, Box 247
24 Grain Fed Tur!
Ib.; Also Giant White
and Black Giant e
broilers, $1. ea. Come
dark any night ex
5 mi, W. Henderson
26, or 12 mi. East - Mont
ioe L. Collison, M
i
Mallards, wild stra
lent breeders, laying
inioned so _that
ped express COD.
mond, Auusta, Rt.
old, best egg grade, g
stock, laying well,
Barfield, Louisville.
odl, laying, $2.50 OB5e
Hwy. 78,-1 1/2 mi,
near Aluminum Co
Smith Jr., Temple, Ri
50 N. H. Red P
old, laying, Carter C)
es 50 ea. will not
. C. Echols, Atle
lemeade Ave. Phone
lot (about
and pullets)
on $1.50 ea.
ewton, Edison, Rt.
: POULTRY WA
ANCONAS:
Lee Ave.
BABY CHICKS:
= raise
ks. old. -
Neal, Dial.
Want raise bro
on share basis; oth
nish chicks and
once. Mrs, A. T.
Ri. 1. aos
rite al
PHEASANT &
Will exch. other
(to get new blood):
Mutant and Amh
Amhearst, Silver,
Reeves or
Ce also 2
and: 1 pr ot
H. e, aBaniee
jand S. E. DI 5182.
Want buy one
Advise. W. K. Su
bridge, 931 Hall S
Want 1 pr. each,
Northern Bob Wh
Silver Lace pheasan'
ver Sebright ban
best price on each.
ot Sr., Brunswi
or 50c Ib, No checks. Mrs. Omie
ontinued from Page One)
h on the board of the National
emurgic Council. He is not
like my letter. Incidentally, I
in on him about three weeks
I was in New York, and show-
the copy of your news release of
sr 17th, which interested him in-
1d which undoubtedly caused
send me the reprint a week or
_ We agree on chemurgy, but
good food and how to get it.
) your program is coming along
orily and that progress will soon
| some major articles in various
ind popular magazines. That's
things willreally get hot. _
Vith very best wishes to you and
sociates.
Sincerely - yours,
Arnold P. Yerkes
985 Vine Street
Winnetka, Illinois
: December 22, 1951
bert E. Winger
of the Board,
Magazine
Avenue,
rk 19, New York
Winger:
current issue, featuring Dr.
mendacious propaganda for
and adulterated food, for which
his associates in Food & Drug
ation are largely to blame and
which the drug trust and its
make exorbitant profits, should
the respect and loyalty of every
naturally expects the- editorial
uch a publication to be a literate -
th at least a smattering of
dge of the facts about such im-
subjects as soils, foods, nutrition,
alth, and even of the perversion
"ood & Drug Administration's ac-
; Wiley was crucified for
on) pieces of silver. A modi-
ommon knowledge would have
. Crawford's principal state-
utterly false and caused a re-
he article unless financial out-
factual considerations.
e at the shrunken advertising
knowledge of the retaliation
8 may expect for printing cer-
stasteful truths. (as mentioned
rug Story, by Norris A. Bealle,
1 Publishing Co., Box 1623,
on, D. C.), suggests possible ex-
1 While advertising is impor-
scribers should be conceded
ue.
rawford says our food is good,
in the worldand getting bet-
offers no proof or even evidence
} statement is true, for the simple
ent reason that it is completely
yy actual analyses by numerous
le laboratciries and scientists,
ty of much of our food is low
_E Foo
y getting worse, as is inevita-
MARKET BULLETIN
ble while we continue to haul to our
cities billions of tons of crops containing
more than a score of essential minerals
if the soils still contain themto go inio
our sewers and garbage dumps and be-
come completely unavailable for ferti-
lizing subsequent crops. Our fertilizing
has been limited almost entirely to cal-
cium, nitrogen, phosphorus and potas-
sium, and these in small fractions of the
quantities removed.
As a result, the quality of much of
our food is so low that deficiency diseases
are rampant and most any kind of vita-~
min-mineral concoction will make a lot
of people feel better, which is why
they continue to buy them. A good sales
talk or advertising may make the first
sale, but surely only morons would con-
tinue to buy a health food or a medi-
cine unless they believed it is benefi-
cialor unless as their doctors continued
to prescribe them, which is becoming
more common. Many top-notch health
officials take vitamins and minerals
daily themselves and recommend them.
The growing sales of vitamins, min-
,
erals, health foods, etc., which Dr. Craw- 2
ford deplores, are merely an effect
growing food and soil deficiencies are
the cause.
If Dr. Crawford or Mr. Ewing had
taken, or would take, the action establish-
ed facts clearly indicate is urgently
needed, and which they have the authori-
ty to takei.e., to restore the depleted
essential minerals to our soils and foods,
there is every indication they could re-
duce the demands for, and sales of,
health foods to a far greater extent
than all their expensive Gestapo methods
have achieved to date: Yet requests for
such action have been refused repeated-
ly. The public is entitled to know the
REAL reason WHY.
One easy but long step toward food
improvement would be to request the big
canning and freezing companies to re-
quire their growers to restore the de-
pleted cobalt, zinc, manganese, copper,
etc., to their soils just as they have for
years required them to restore: depleted
calcium, nitrogen, phosphorus and po-
tassium. Not a single sound reason has
been, or can be, advanced against such
action. Men who should know say Food
& Drug Administration has authority to
specify that interstate shipments of foods
must meet certain requirements as to
mineral content; if not, they could easily
get it.
if Tom Linder, Agriculiural Com-
missioner of Georgia, can require food
offered for sale in his state to meet such
requirements, then surely the Food &
Drug Administration can and should do
so for the nation. (See enclosed Georgia
news release). If Dr. Crawford continues-
his highly questionable attitude of op-
posing the logical type of ptogram for
food improvement such as is now under
way in Georgia, then vigorous steps
should be taken to replace him with Tom
Linder or a reasonable facsimile there-
of, and the sooner the better.
d For WHOLE
Life
It is hard to understand Dr. Craw-
fords reasons for making erroneous as-
sertions not only contradicted by num-
erous reports by United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture and other recognized
authorities, but by his own chief, Mr.
Oscar Ewing, and by his colleague, Dr.
Wm. H. Sebrell, head of National Health
Institute, a part of the Federal Security
Agency the same as Food & Drug Ad-
ministration. Whether his misstatements
on such a vitally important matter were
due to incredible ignorance or ulterior
motives, they seem to afford ample rea-
son for his being required to find other
means of livelihood besides a public
pay-roll. (See enclosed quotations from
Ewing and Sebrell).
He repeats the ridiculous and long
since disproved theory that mineral con-
tent of plants cannot be changed no mat-
ter how depleted the soils, and cites
Maynard, the Darius Green of agronomy,
in support. Deaths of thousands of sheep
in many areas from cobali depletion in
the soils represent just one of scores of
refutations.
It is indeed touching that Dr. Craw-
ford feels such solicitude lest a few citi-
zens waste some of their earningsafier
taxes on food supplements of question-
able merit butby his own admission
harmless. But why does he strain at
gnats and swallow camels by the score?
Does he, or the staff of American Maga-
zine, think the public is so gullible and
uninformed as to believe the prices for
health foods which he cites are more
exorbitant than those for the numerous
wonder drugs which he approves, and
which a speaker at the recent large
chemical convention declared were the
greatest crime ever perpetrated against
the human race?
A friend reports spending over $5,000
for cortisone for his arthritis in 1959.
He is still takine it and is far from cur-
ed. : 5
Add his dociors fees and compare
the total with the $200.00 per year Dr.
Crawford deplores so deeply. The total
bill to the public for all the vaccines,
serums, antibiotics, hormones, preserva-
tives, insecticides and other ."approved
but often deleterious and sometimes
lethal materials used somewhere along
the line in producing or processing our
foods, total not the few millions Dr.
Crawford deplores for health foods,
but billions. What was that about con-
sistency and jewels??
The scum who sell narcotics to boys
and girls are rightly regarded as the
lowest type of criminal. . Yet the crime .
of deliberately deceiving the public as to
the quality of its food and of opposing
all attempts to improve that food except
those that benefit certain favored in-
terests, is equally diabolical and of far
greater magnitude because it perils the
health, happiness, and well-being of
every citizen, young or old. You should
be less than proud of your aid to this
subversive cabal.
Very truly yours,
Arnold P. Yerkes
HELP WANTED | FARM HELP WANTED
FARM HELP WANTED
FARM HELP WANTED
FARM HELP WANTED
amily for 1952| Want small family, white or
Also raise broil-.| colored, to milk 25 cows with
asis. Good 4 R.|milking machine, and day
icity, near school} work in addition. Apply at Mil-
T. K. Moore, Sr.,| ler and Putnams Dairy. Come
Rivertown Rd., Cedar Grove
; Rd., and Bethlehem Rd. T. K.
Putnam, Fairburn, Rt. 2.
Want at once, man with
wife to work on truck farm
.}and live with owner. Pay $10.
weekly and half of the gro-
ceries furnished, plus 20 Pct.
Ris bonus. Harvey Lee Tripp, Sa-
te or colored farm-| vannah, Rt. i, Box 335 B.
or, or good stock :
4 cultivatable land.| Wunt single, sober, energetic,
ith lights, good.| white man io raise purebred
, pasture, 6 mi, | hogs and feed for same. Salary,
| bus by door, 4 mi.}Toom, board, laundry; Also
0 basis-or standing| share in hogs to reliable party
Newsome, Sanders- | to live in home. No drunks nor
: : drifters wanted. J. H. Donaid-
son, Fort Valley, Rt. 1. ;
n|- Wand good size family to
| other necessary crops on halves
| or with stock. References te-
: 2G, Maddox, Winder.
| raise a large cotton crop and|
Want white or colored wom-
an with children to help make
-crop on farm, gather same. 4
R_ house, bus and mail route,
tobacco and cotton. Mrs. M. O.
Woodruff, Stillmore, Rt. 2, Rox
1
101
Want colored man to work
on chicken farm. Must be hon-
est, sober, no drifters. Small 3
R house, lights, water furnish-
ed. Prefer man with wife only.
Good home for right people.
Ivan Smith, Clarkston, 410
Main St. ;
Want white or col. family
for large cotton crop for 1952;
cultivate with tractor. Give all
details in first letter. Loyd D.
Culbertson, Winterville, Rt. - 1,
Box 16.
Want someone to raise lay-
ing hens on a share basis. Must
be able finance self. I have the
dand, buildings and equipment.
Excellent location and mar-
kets. J. R. Sloan, Pelham, Rt, 1.
Telephone 6524. a
{4
Want colored couple, middle
aged, for wages; woman to do
ight farm chores, man to do
farm work with mules. 3 R
house, lights, well in yard.
Regular work. Pay every Sat-
urdav; Or part crop, part
wages. Allen Reynolds, Con-
yers, Rt. 1.
Want man and wife for farm
work on _ farm, preferably
Christians. No children. Fur-
nish house, lights, water and
fuel. B. C. Langley, Atlanta,
1936 Flat Shoals Rd., S. BE. Di.
0141,
Want 1 or 2 H farmer, white
or col., 50-50 basis. Good land,
good house, on school and
mail Rt. George T. Smith,
Sharpsburg.
Want middleage, unencum-
bered, clean white or col. wom-
an, to do light farm work on
farm. Steady year around
work. $14. week, room and
board, Mrs. John W. Harms,
_| Savannah, White Bluff Rd.
a
Want reliable couple, white
or colored, no children, exp, for
poultry farm, located on paved
road. New 4 R house, lights,
water, bath, etc., garden spot,
also milk, eggs, butter, chick-
ens, and good wages. Bryan
Leibel, Stone Mountain, Rt. 3.
Phone through Atlanta 4-3-
6493.
Want sev. families. exp. in
cotton and gen. farming, in-
cluding Foreman. Houses wired,
ready for occupancy. F, B.
Jackson, Wrightsville, Green-
view Farms.
Want white man to cultivate
5 A in corn, plow garden and
small patches, small chicken
house, live with aged couple
or by self if preferred, and
salary. R. J. Allen, Talking
Rock.
Want nice, healthy, Christian
woman to do light farm work
on farm, for room, board and
small salary. Mrs, Olin John-
son, Thomson, Rt. 1.
PAGE SEVEN
s
&
PAGE HIGHT
Man Is Destroying The E
time of the settlement of the Town of -
(Continued from Page One)
ing is a dangerous thing. The truth of
this saying was never better illustrated
than in the little learning that man has
with regard to the increase of crops by
ee the addition of some commercial ferti-
ae lizer. ~ E
Se Man has continually added nitrogen,
acid and potash to increase the yield. He -
did not bother to add cobalt, magnesium,
manganese, iron, zinc and the many oth-
er elements which nature requires in the
production of crops and in the construc-
tion of animal and human bodies.
When man increased the yield per acre
principally by the addition of three ele-
ments, h caused the consumption by the
plants of the other elements in larger in-
creased quantities. Since the crops were
using much more of most elements than
man was returning, naturally the land
became deficient in those elements and
has become more and more depleted with
each passing year. 3
In the meantime, the population of the
_ world and the population of the cities
have enormously increased. As the city
population increased, larger and larger
volumes of food were necessary to be
taken off of the land and hauled to the
cities. Never in all the history of the
many people living in cities as there are
today. The population of the world has
likewise increased. It is said that at the
FARM HELP WANTED | FARM HELP
Want small family, 50-50
world has there been anything like as
Want white woman to live as
MARKET BULLETIN.
Jamestown, Virginia, there were less
than one-half of one billion people in the
entire world, Today thre are approxi-
in the world. Five times as many peo-
were when Jamestown was settled. Not
only has the population tremendously
increased, but an ever greater percent-
age of the population lives in the cities.
In the United States, for instance, 100
years ago, more than 80 percent of the
people lived onthe farms. Today less
than 20 percent live on the farms.
As the city populations increase and
-
crease, there is more and more unrest
and dissatisfaction among the people. All
of which is largely basic dissatisfaction
with the amount of food they are able to
put into their stomachs, This is not only
true with the people of America, but it is
many times magnified among the popula-
tions of Europe and Asia where the num-
bers were increased for centuries before
America was even founded.
The life giving virtues of earth have
been taken away in China, India and the
are rapidly being taken away from the
soil every year in this new land of
America. a
food. Without food in nourishing quan-
tities there can be no peace. Those who
WANTED POSITIONS WANTED
Experienced Dairyman wants
mately two and one-half billion people
ple to be fed today in the world as there.
the percentage of farm populations de-_
other countries of Asia and Europe. They
Mans primitive and basic need is
f
- POSITIONS WANTED
Couple wants job on farm
| a part of his relation or duty
understand this and who are work
a restoration of the soils are the real
moters of peace and prosperity
here, but in the entire world.
Once we have digested the
mental principles which we h
to illustrate in this article, it i
to understand that the ba
transporting enough food from
to feed the world involves t
tion of the country from whic
is exported. aes
When God created the races
and fixed the bounds of their h
he made natural laws which
them to make their own lands
taining. If they fail to do thi
_and destitution will overtake
if persevered in long enoug
witt:be their lot. (5-2 e
_ Iam writing this article as the
to other articles on soil, soil |
soil preservation and soil build
In the course of these article
~ discuss rnany things. Preserved
en together we believe these arti
be of great: value to our people
_in agriculture, but in the solu
nomic and political problems
lieve that it must be basicall,
mans relationship to God an
ator who created man and pu
earth to dress it and to keep
TOM LINDER,
Commissioner of Agr
basis for 57 A farm near Tuck-
er. New 3 R_ house, elec.,
chicken house, brooder house,
barn, pastures fenced. Must be
sober and have A-1 ref., and
furnish self. Stuart Lewis, At-
lanta, 1264 Cumberland Rd.
Me EOS"
Want couple to raise stock
on shares, etc. Have Kudzu and
Lespedeza ready to graze; good
land to raise feed, cotton and
etc. Some extra work and
bonus if stay several years.
Mary A. Rhyne, White.
Want sober man or with
son, to do gen. farm work and
dairy (when dairy help is off).
Must know how to run De-
Laval milking machine. Fur-
nish house, water, lights and
garden. S. E. Hartin, Colum-
bus, Rt. 2, Macon Rd. Phone
3-1148.
Want farmer for 2 H or 1
H farm on halves. Good smooth
Jand, good mules. 5 R_ house,
school and mail by door. Elec.,
in house. 3 mi. N. Douglasville.
T. W. Simmons, Douglasville,
Broad St.
Want farmer for 50 A land,
50-50 basis, pick crop, 2 chick-
en houses, 4000 cap., R house,
elec., gooe water in yard, school
bus by door, near church, 2
mules, good tools. Come see.
10 mi. due West Cornelia. R.
D. Saville, Cornelia, Rt. 1.
Want man with small family
to look after cattle and pastures
on cattle farm Houston Co.,
Middle Ga., $2.50 daily and cow
to milk. 3 R house. References}
required. M. C. Roberts, Ball
Ground.
Want reliable man to operate
_ good 2 H farm on 50-50 basis,
make bale cotton to acre good |
year, 3 1/2: mi. E. McDonough,
mail and school bus route, good
settlement, near church, lights
in house. H. E. McGarity Mc-
Donough, RFD 1.
Want farmer for chicken
farm near city limits Atlanta.
6 R dwelling house with all
conveniences. Unusual opport-
unity for reliable family or
couple. References required.
Apply in person, J. W. Scogin,
Atlanta. Suite 526, Candler
Bla
| 4
one of family on farm and help
with poultry and other light
farm chores. Reasonabie salary.
J. O. Aldredge, College Park,
Le - (Cor. Union and Aldredge
Want healthy, settled woman
to live in home on farm with
aged couple and do light farm
chores .for room, board, and
reasonable salary. Geo. R. Hunt,
Kathleen.
Want: some honest man to
work about 5500 turpentine
boxes. Prefer to have mule, and
help enough to tend garden and
plant feed stuff for few cows
and hogs, also tend to same.
Agreeable basis. Good house,
(needs little repairs.) TD. Fus-
sell, Rhine.
Want good 1 H farmer on 50-
50 basis. Nice 5 R house on
Canon-Carnesville Hwy, near
church and school.. Will fix
land ready to plant with trac-
tor Branson Starr, Canon, Rt. 2.
Want farmer for 2 H farm
for 1952, on 50-50 basis or
standing rent. 5 R house, lights,
wood. School bus route, well of
water. Party desired that can
furnish self. Marvin M, New-
some, Sandersville.
Want farm family for 80 A
farm. Large 4 R house with
lights, good pastures. Located
5 mi. from one of the _ best
State markets. School bus and
mail route. H. H. Watkins,
Thomasville, Rt. 2, Box 242.
Experienced dairy help want-
ed on dairy farm. 6 mi. W. Grif-
fin. Phone 4610. L. N. Touch-
stone, Williamson, c/o Rover-
land Farm.
Want armer for 2 H crop,
with own stock and tools. Good
house, well, elec., mail and
school bus route, 25 mi. At-
lanta on Chattahoochee River
.D. L. West, Douglasville, RFD
Want farmer, plenty help, to
cultivate 30 acres good level
Jand on halves with mules. 5
R house, lights, school bus. Pay
one hand 30c hour when not
in crop. Houston Co., Middle
Georgia. M. C. Roberts, Ball
Ground. . aes
job on farm. Call 5037, Coving-
ton. G. A. Jones, Newborn.
Man with wite, 7 children
wants tractor farm on halves
or wages ($35. week), and
house with lights, water. De-
sire to raise cotton, corn, pea-
nuts. 25 yrs. experience with
tractors: and farming. Have to
be moved, ready now. Jack
Rackley, Columbus, Rt. 1, Box
228A. :
Man, 31 yrs. old, wants farm,
50-50 basis. Tobacco, raise
stock on shares, with good
house, lights, water and trac-
tor to farm with. See at once.
E. D. Huggins, Sr., Ellabell, Rt.
Te
Middleaged woman, good
character, wants work on farm,
doing light farm chores,
home and good salary. Prefer
near Atlanta, Decatur, Lithonia
or Fairburn. Or raise chickens.
Can give ref. Ans. all letters.
Mrs. Lee Dickson, MaNetta,
Rt. 5, (Fair Oaks).
Man, one arm, wants job
looking after cattle or poultry;
do some farming. Have 16 yr.
old son,
work also. Like move at once.
Bill Overby, Gainesville, 613
Oak St.
Want raise chickens fer parts
who will furnish house and
weekly salary. Married and
have one child. Am 31 yrs.
old. Andrew J. Sellers, Gaines-
villey Rt. 2.
36 yr. old man wants job
looking after cattle farm. Have
wife, 5 children, 2 boys 15 and
13 can work when not in
school. Lifetime experience,
fencing and sowing pasture,
driving tractor and truck, feed
mills, other machinery. Can
furnish best of references. Rob-
ert A. Thomas, Temple, Rt. 2%.
Man and woman want work
on farm looking after chick-
ens or stock. (woman is blind
but able to do light farm
chores). Private room, small
salary. Jonie Johnston,
Rufus Tucker, Douglasville, Rt.
L i ;
_shares.- Lester Gooch, Winter-
for
and wife who can
Care
or dairy for wages. Need fur-
nished house. Go anywhere.
Move at once. D. L. Grindle,
Care Jack Grindle, Flowery
Consider job as
ae "- |Glyde Gable, Ce
White man and young son | C S30 =
wants -job caring for broilers a Marietta
or laying hens on poultry farm. | ~~~ tee
Experienced. Reasonable sal-} Want farm on
ary; consider 2, H crop, 00! preferably 2 ho:
co allotment,
Self, wife, girl 13,
Have to be fu
moved. Would 1
milk for self,
nuts and cott
Care Viola Padge
Rt. 2, Box 233
School and mail r
to be moved.
Douglasville or
ville, -R. F. De 1.
Want job on farm, tractor
or truck driving, or dairy work.
25. yrs. old, Christian, sober,
dont use profanity. Letters
ans. Herbert Brown, Coving-
ton, Rt. 5. ; :
9th ANNUAL SOUTHEASTERN REG
ABERDEEN-ANGUS SHOW AND S
The 9th annual Southeastern Regional Aberde
Show and Sale, at Southeastern Fair Groun
will be held, Friday, January 25; Show, 10
12:30 P.M.14 bulls and 60 females, from |
7 Southeastern States. Sale Manager: W. Ta
c/o Central Ga. Rwy., Savannah. - . i
SPECIAL NOTICE IMPORT
We receive many complaints from parties w
to notices in the BulletinNEVER receive an a
though a self-addressed stamped envelope |
enclosed with the letter or order for reply. |
is published in the Bulletin, regarding Positions
Help Wanted, or any item listed for Sale, in Exc
or Wantedit is the duty of the party in who
notice is listed to answer immediately every
etc., that he or she receives regarding said n
not only the business way of handling transact
matter of politeness as well, and patrons of th
OWE this courtesy (both to themselves and
tin), whether the order is filled or not; failur
makes the prospective customer lose confid
patron and in the Bulletin. Also, we cann
strongly the absolute necessity of satisfacto
ing all transactions entered intodo not list
exchange any item that you do not actually
under no circumstances allow others the p
your name and address to their :
STAND THE RESPONSIBILITY
notice and YOUR O PEI
UST si BE}