i
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Empires.
Georgia Farmers*
Tom Linder Commissioner
XN
Editorial By TOM LINDER
It is very doubtful if anyone can, with
ny assurance, tell what the probable
yutcome is for agriculture or anything
alse in the light of world and national
zonditions.
Those citizens of 50 years and more of
age remember some of the things that
occurred during the years
World War I.
As a concrete illustration, there: was &
town in Middle Georgia having four
banks. All of these banks had made
money during the years from 1916 until
1921. . After that, the smallest bank fail-
ed. The next largest bank took over its
assets and undertook to pay off its cred-
itors. As a result the second bank also
failed. The third bank took over what
remained of the assets of the two defunct
banks and as a result the third bank fail-
ed. The fourth bank being the largest
tried to take over the remnants of all
three banks. As a result of taking over
these doubtful assets, coupled with the
epreciated value of its own assets, the
fourth bank failed. A fihe community
in Middle Georgia was left without a
bank of any kind.
' That seems to be what has happened
to the countries of the world. The na-
tions of Europe have gone down under
the debts of past wars and under the ir-
resistible force of uncontrolled inflation.
Over the decades, Great Britain sought
to prosper out of the remains of Euro-
pean, Asiatic and African countries that
had been overthrown or that had never
been able to stand on their own feet.
As a result of the decline of trade and
the undermining of British morale by
socialism, Great Britain is tottering to its
5s
fall.
The United States, like the four banks
; Middle Georgia, has undertaken to
nance all of these tottering Nations and
As a result, the only sound
lation left on earth is very likely to go
Own in the avalanche of socialism and
ncontrolled inflation.
The people of the country
fashington for aid and guidance. Wash-
gton apparently is not interested in
at happens to America. Washington
; interested only in using the assets and
anpower of the United States to carry
a on
FOR 1952
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1952
NUMBER 20
OUTLOOK
following
look to
out world wide schemes of impractical
world makers.
AGRICULTURE IN THE
WASHINGTON SCHEME
The American farmer is no exception
to the general rule in the Washington
scheme. The American farmer is being
sacrificed at the behest of world makers.
From timeto time, readers of the- Mar-
ket Bulletin have been told about the
so-called Reciprocal Trade Agreements
through which the American market is
being transferred to products of other
lands. It had been pointed out to read-
ers of the Bulletin that unlimited im-
ports into this country would not only
destroy the American farmer but would
also destroy the American workman and
businessman,
In 1951, the Congress reinacted the so-
called Reciprocal Trade Agreements. In
that Act was a provision designed to stop
the imports of foreign products whenever
their importation threatened the sound
eeonomy of this country.
There is now before the Congress an
Act to repeal this provision so that there
would be no protection Shae. from
unlimited imports.
~ At the present time, the feeders who
are in greatest danger are cotton grow-
ers, peanut growers, soybean growers,
hog producers and dairymen. This is
true because of the great abundance of
fats and oils which are now and will con-
tinue to flood this country.
I am reproducing herewith an article
entitled The Dairy Farmers Stake in
Retaining Import Controls. While this
article deals with the dairy farmer, it is
equally applicable to farmers producing
cotton seed, peanuts, soybeans and hogs.
I hope that every farmer will read it
carefully.
At the coming session of the Congress,
efforts will be made to repeal the laws
under which imports of dairy products
into this country are regulated.
Dairy farmers throughout the country,
and their leaders, should be against re-
peal of the law authorizing such controls
(Section 104 of the Defense Production
Act), for the following urgent reasons:
a. Foreign dairy product. prices are be-
low prices in this country. Due to gov-
ernment-to-government agreements, it is
not possible to tell exactly what price
imported butter would sell for in this
country. Englands contract price for
New Zealand and Australian butter is
around 35.5 to 36.5 per pound. Sales out-
side the contract are higher. At the Brit-
ish contract price, butter could be im-
ported for about 44-48 cents per pound
(contract price plus 2-4 cents transporta-
tion and 7 cents per pound duty on the
first 60 million pounds), At recently
quoted prices for non-contract butter,
imports could be made at from 58-61
cents per pound. With the full tariff
rate of 14 cents per pound applicable on
butter in excess of the first 60 million
pounds, import prices would be about
65-68 cents per pound. Unlimited im-
ports to this country would tend to raise
the contract prices in time, with the
probable result that butter would be im-
ported into this country at lower prices
than those quoted above.
b. Imports at the lower prices would
cause a sharp reduction in prices to farm-
ers in this country, and cause drastic re-
ductions in production.
1. Standards for import controls for
dairy products authorized by Section 104.
All statements to the contrary, Section
104 DOES NOT PROHIBIT IMPORTS
OF DAIRY PRODUCTS. It DOES pro-
vide that imports may be regulated if tha
Secretary of Agriculture finds that im:
ports would:
a. Impair our domestic
supply;
b. Disrupt. the storing and market-
ing system during the-season of flush
production;
c. Result in unnecessary expendi-
tures under the price support program.
Unless one of the three results named
above would ensue, imports cannot be
controlled under Section~104.
Soon after the passage of Section 104,
the Secretary of Agriculture found that
uncontrolled imports would have such
results, and started regulating imports
under the import control oe (DFO 3,
UES DAY.
Under this order, imports of butter
and non-fat dry milk solids are not per-
mitted, but imports of cheese are permit-
ted up to the average volume imported
during 1948, 1949, and 1950.
2. The effect of unlimited imports on
dairy product prices and the dairy farm-
er. The Secretary of Agriculture has
made an official finding THAT IM-
PORTS MUST BE REGULATED, OF,
(Continued on Page
source of
Four)
PAGE [WO-
MARKET BULLETIN.
Shed
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
on the mailing list le for change of address to STATE BU-
-REAU OF MARKETS, 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta. ?
ATL
of notice.
NAL EDIT
[asspchar(on
Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable
under postage regulations inserted one time on each request
and repeated only when request is accompained by new copy
RIAL
Bi
Limited space wil) not permit insertion of notices contain-
ing more than 35 to 40 words, not including name and address
Bulletin,
aotics.
To:n Linder, Commissioner
Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does
not assume any responsibility for any notice appearing in the
nor for any transaction resulting from published
Published Weekly ai
Markets, 222 State Capitol,
Atlanta, Ga.
114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga |
By Department of Agriculture
Notify on FORM 3578Bureau ot :
Entered as
of June 6,
of October 8, 1917.
second class matter
August 1, 1937 at the Post Office |
at Covington, Georgia, under Act
1900. Accepted for :
mailing at special rate of postage
orovided for in Section 1103. Act
State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga.
Publication Office
Executive Office, State Capito) |
Editorial and Executive Offices
J 114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.
* SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
Practically new M2 Integral
Plow for J. D.\Model M trac-
tor, $75.00 at my farm 11/2
mi. N. Hiram; Also want. 2 or
3 Three Row Grain Drills and
discarded mule. drawn hay
rakes within 25 mi. of my
home." Harvie E. Bickers, Hi-
ram.
J. T. Case 11 Dise grain drill,
ae and grass seed hop- Rt
pers, $350.00; Set 2 Row Corn
Planters and 2 Row Cultivator
for Ford Hydraulic Lift trac-
tor, $100.; Farm wagon, pneu-
matic tires, practically new,
$110. Tel. 62. J..Dr. Thomas J.
Hick, McCaysville, Care Green
Acres Stock Farm.
Maid of Honor Pressure Can-
mer in good condition, $12.00.
Postage prepaid. Mrs. C. M.
Fulford, Ellaville, Rt. 3.
Meadow Grist Miil, 20. in.
rock and sheller, $50.00. Mes.
W. O. Ritch, Aragon, Rt. 1.
1951 Farm Master Hot Water
Kerosene Oil Heating incubator,
used one time, like new, for
fale, cheap. Mrs. W. H. Walters,
Lavonia, Rt. 2.
2 small Electric Brooders,
one 500 egg cap.; Also horse
drawn Hay Rake, and Mowing
Machine for sale. J. H. Smith,
Perry, P.O. Box 15.
One 2 Row Cultivator, Plant-
er, and Distributor for DC or
SC Case tractor, extra good
condition, $250.00. Phone 36J20.
R. M. Davison, Woodville.
New W. D. Allis-Chalmers
tractor, sub-soil plow and 8
disc Athens harrow, used about
3 days. All guaranteed. Mrs. E.
P. Williams, Greshamville.
350-500 Elec. Floor Brooder,
deck Elec. Brooder, one 10
egg Elec. Incubator for sale. E.
J. Covey, Atlanta, 1027 Mt.
fury Dr., S. W;
Farmall Cub with planters,
cultivators, fertilizer distribu-
tors, mulcher, lights, starter,
hand lift, A-1 cond., $625. Wey-
man L. Carmichael, Jr., Madi-
gon, Rt. 1, :
1951 Super A Farmall trac-
tor, smoothing harrow, tiller,
planters, cultivators, 1st. class
condition, bargain. See: Harold
W. Hulme, Social Circle, Rt. 1.
Walking Cultivator, practical-
ly new, $50.00; Ford-Ferguson
tractor, good condition, $600.
= T. Beckworth, Baxley, Rt.
Turner Peanut -Sheller with
all necessary screens for shell-
ing both runner and Spanish
peanuts, all good condition,
oe 00. R. A. Register, Rentz.
2 Cultivators, one riding; in
good shape, 1 walking, used
one season,
Caneega, Wrightsville.
1 used Electric Churn, $3.00;
1 new Bee Hive with some
new and used tops and racks,
$5.00; Also few other small
items of farming equipment.
Mrs. Joe ,S. Stanton, Conyers,
ad
Electric Incubator, 100 egg
cap., with thermostat and ther-
mometer included, never used,
$15. E. O. Shipp, Hiram, Rt. 2.
Farm Master, 2 bucket Mulk-
ing Machine, and 8 can Milk
Cooler with agitator, Ist. class
condition, for sale. Phone 398
R. W. C. Ayer, Barnesville.
16 in Hammer Mill with 50
hp motor, 1 1/2 ton Feed Mixer
-equipped with oil switch, rea-
sonable for cash only. Write, cr
phone 7793. Ben Wofford, Cum-
ming.
4 Disc Athens Tiller in good
shape, $150. at my place. FOB.
R. P. McCorkle, Buena Vista.
Allis Chalmers B tractor
draw bar, power take-off, hy-
draulic lift, lights, starter and
farming equipment, all good
cond., $526. for quick sale.
Frank Thompson, Tarrytown,
Rt. 2.
J. D., 12 A Combine cut only
60 acres. Will sacrifice; also
THC Super A Farmall with
planters, cultivators and 2 disc
plow used 1 season, at give a-
way price. A. B. Hill, Unadilla.
Combine Case A-6, with
Clover attachment, cut less 390
acres, excellent cond. E. A.
Peavy Jr., Lumpkin. c/o Douhle
F, Ranch.
Farmall Cub tractor, 1951
model, bought last April, with
disc plow, harrow, mowing
machine and other planting
requipment, at my farm. E. A.
Allgood, Atlanta, P. O. Box
1694. Phone VE 7754.
A 2H cuttaway harrow, 2 4
plows and 1 combination steel
planter and cultivator, in good
cond. for sale. R. 2 Earnest,
East Point, Box 283. Phone
7245,
David Bradley garden tractor,
2 1/2 H. P. cycle bar mower,
turn plow and _ cultivator, in
good shape, $185.; Also 1 sec.
spring tooth harrow, $15. Sat-
urday and Sunday only, at my
home. W. H. Craig, Riverdale,
Hwy. 138.
Three single deck Premier
Starter Brooders, 50 chick cap.,
$12 ea. Thos. C. Kersey, Dub-
lin, Rt. 4.
for sale. Andrew
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY FOR SALE
Cotton and Corn Planter,
Guano Distributer combined,
used part one season, $28. cash,
Trade for good cornySee at my
place 3 mi. Villa Rica. Robert
Wiggley, Villa Rica, Rt 1.
1945 Rototiller, with 5 hp|
gasoline motor, 20 in., rubber
tire~ wheels, no reverse shit,
|used only few times, includes
mew, seeder and other attach-
ments, $295. E. A. Anderson,
Atlanta; 1810 Myrtle Dr., S. W
Phone RA 4615.
Farmall M Mowing Machine,
perfect cond. $125.;
Duplex Feed: Mill, used very
little, $100. L. E. Crawford, Len-
ox.
Chicken and turkey joa
elec, Brower make, 500 cap. 5
decks, high, fine machine,
Frank A. Doughman, Atlanta,
414 Hurt Bldg.
42-R McCormick Deering
Combine in running cond., $150.
R. B. Hancock, Zebulon.
A 2H wagon, in good cone,
for sale. Paul Sullivan, Thomas-
ton. Rt. 2
John Deere A ~< tractor,
12-A combine, 1 Intnl. 45-T
automatic pickup hay baler, all
good cond. for sale. G. Forrest
Smith, Colbert.
Caterpillar Tractor, tilt type,
bulldozer blade, good cond:, sell
cheap, or trade for cattle. Phone
1357M2. Mrs. J. E. Jarvis;.Dub-
lin, c/o Double J. Ranch.
~ Good Corn and Cotton Plant-
er at a bargain at my farm.
Arthur Owen, -Barnesville.
One J. Deere B. Tractor and
equipment, planters, cultivators,
harrow at bargain. James Wal-
ler, Soperton, P. O. Box 244.
Tel. 48. oe
One Power Pea and Velvet
Bean Thresh, complete with
belts and Wisc. air cooled: gas
motor, all good condition. sell
Thresh separate if desired. O.
E. Justice, Irwinton, Rt. 2.
One John Deere (killifer) Re-
volving Scrape, new blade and
shoes, $100.; Bush and Bog Har-
row, wooden bearings, new 350.
QO. J. Tolnas, Athens, 209
Shackelford Bldg.
One Brady Garden Traczor
with disc harrow, turning plow,
cultivators, and mower; $100. J.
C. McMullan, Forsyth, Phone
6876.
1949 John Deere Tractor,
Model: M with power take-oif,
4 wheel weights, planters, culti-
vators, Taylorway harrow, used
little, $1400. Will not sell separ-
ately. C. Love, Forest Park, P.
O. Box 126.
One set Steel Wheels for
Farmall M Tractor, exc. cond.,
$100.; Also Intl. F-30 three Disc
Plow, good cond. Make offer.
Donald White, Curryville, Rt. i
One 6_ft. Double Section 23
Disc J. Deere WBA harrow, evc.
condition, $125. Phone 6876.
George G. McMullan, Forsyth.
One Horse Wagon, good cond.,
for sale. See at my place. L. O.
Garner, Lilburn,
King Corn, Bean, and Peanut
Planter, $17.75; Dialog Cotton
Planter, $4.50; Both good cond.
At my place. T, J. Steed, Buena
Vista.
Harrow transport trailer, used
only with an 8-10 dise harrow,
$60. FOB my place. Harley i.
Sutton, Alpharetta. Rt. 2, Phone
4462.
No. 64 Chattanooga 2 H Plow,
$10.; Also No, 10 Oliver 2 Hf
Plow, needs new handles, very
cheap; And Farm. Bell cheap.
Phone No, 2-5865. Pat H. Wira-
pey, Macon, Rt. 3, Goddall Mill
Rd.
Farmall Cub Tractor with
hydralic lift and tiller, 1901
model, used about 2 montis,
$890. Cash or terms. F. .
Brown, Jonesboro.
Hudson Power Sprayer,
mounted, 50 gal. cap. with
Briggs Stratton Motor, $75. Jack
Davis, Temple.
Petersime separate hatch
compartment Incubator, cap,
1600. eggs per week, good as.
new, $350,; 2 five deck battery,
good cond., $40. ea. H. R. Clarke,
Kelley-.
%
JD|
| Munroe, Buchanan, Rt. 2. Tele-
phone 3871.
j,| condition. Ben H. Bradley, Jasp-
Must be bargain for cash. O.
x
SECOND HAND
4 Disc Case Tiller with cedar
box, used very little, $200. J.
C. Lee, College Park, Rt. 1, Wel-
come All Road. 1 12: mi. off
Roosevelt Iwy. South of Col-
lege Park.
- Ford.2 dise plow for sale or
swap for Ford, bottom plow. R.
L. Ellis, Cordele. Rt. 1, Phone
648-W-3.
FOB. T. R, Breedlove, Monroe.
rebuilt and repainted, ready to
go $650, Tel. CA. 4809. George
eee Atlanta, Rt. 1, Box 315
20 Dise ie with: 20 in.
disc for Ford Tfactor, pickup
type, good shape, $125. Phone
356 R. H. D. Davis, Cedartown.
\One Boyett Tractor Sprayer
for Super A Intl, like new,
cheap for cash, Jiles Hamilton,
Alma, c/o Green Acres..
SECOND HAND
MACHINERY WANTED
Want Tractor Tire for rear
Wheel, siz 900-24. State cond.,
and price detivered to Dexter.
Lewis A. Jones, Dexter, Rt. 1.
Want one new Idea Tobacco
Transplanter in good condition.
Vergle Walls, Warwick, Rt. 1.
stating cash price, Letters ans.
L. T.. Harrell, Hazlehurst, 20i)
A. N. Cromartie.
Want small Electric Brooder,
preferably 100 chick capacity,
good condition, reasonable. Mrs.
Fred Cleveland, Roswell, Rt. 1,
Houze Rd.
Want Planters, Cultivators for
VAC Case Tractor and 10-12 in.
Hammer Mill.. Must be in: 1sv.
class shape. Not over 50 miles |
Jefferson. O. E. Darnell, Jef-
ferson, Rt. 3.
Want used tractor, 1 or 2
row. State make and model,
also equipment, price and con-
dition. Prefer nearby. Maurice
Want 51 Model Farmall Cub
tractor, all equipment for same.
L. Murphy, J asper.
Want 2 Row tractor with or
without equipment. Give par-
ticulars. J. D. Harris, Monroe,
Rt2:
MACHINERY FOR SALE|
Caterpillar 22, wide guage,,
Grape Vines,
Raspberry, Cra
peg te ioe mee
and Blueberr os
Bulbs, 3 doz,
Eaton, a
IHC et cond., $85. | Tifton.
Toole, Macon, 1381
Lucretia _Dewb.
large fruit, bearing
plants, $1. doz.; $4
Mrs. C. M. Robin
ville: Bes
Mastodon Everbe:
|berry, 75 C; Catn.
mint, Balm, Sp
and, Single Tansy
Houseleak, Garli
doz.; Sarsaparilla,
Elecampane, 65ce d
-M. White, Dahlo:
Box 57..
Extra large, firm
ou flavor Lady
ry, grow 2 st
ground, 75 C; 200,
$3.25; ' Mrs. Jeff S. ;
ming.
Want second hand Black!
Hawk Corn Sheller. Must, be in ee !
good condition. Write first Cc: M: Prune
ea.; Mt. Huckleb
75c doz.; Kudzu Cro
Dewberry, $1. doz.
age. Mrs. John Hoy
land, Rt. 1.
Blakemore Straw
| 500, $4.50; $9. 1
| Strawberry, 70c C.
M; Klondike, 60c
$4.75 M; Scuppern
50 doz.; Pepper
Add postage. Mrs.
Cumming, Re te
Strawberry, Blake
500, $4.50; $9. M;
60c C; 500, $2.75; $4.7
pernong cuttings, Oc
| nip, 25 bunch; Pep:
doz. Add ~ postage.
Hood, Gainesville,
Early Jersey, Wa
bage, White Berm
Plants, 300; 90; 500,
M. Del Otis Conner,
Early Jersey, W:
bage, and White
Plants, 300, $1. 500,
M; Also R utger To
Want Gearing for Cane Mill,
or Power Mill, cheap for cash. |
H. T. Hughes; Tucker, Rt. 1. |
Want Mower (for Farmall A
Tractor or Horse Drawn) and
Rake, Manure Spreader, good
Tt. 2p
Want One Sickle Bar and
Disc Harrow for David Bradiey
Garden. Tractor. State cond.,
and cash price. E. M. Jones,
McDonough, Rt. 3. ;
and Lime or Fertilizer Spreader
for Ford Tractor, in or near
DeKalb. Co. Contact: F. J. Wil-
son, Decatur, Rt. 2, DE 7122.
PLANTS FOR SALE
Mt. Huckleberry, bearing size,
Birdeye Bushes, Blackberry,. 75
doz.; Plum Bushes, 20c ea.; Yel-
low Root, 50c doz. Add post-
age. Miss Malvie Henderson,
Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Copenhagen and Early Jer-
sey Cabbage and White Ber-
muda Onion Plants, 500, $1.23;
$2. M. Ship daily. Quality and
count guaranteed. E. L. Fitz-
gerald, Irwinville.
Lady Thompson. Strawberry,
50c C; 300, $1.35; .500, $2.25;
Peppermint, 35c doz.; 50, 70c;
$120: C; Tansy;..6, 30; Large
type Garlic, 50c doz. Mrs. J. M.
Hall, Calhoun, Rt. 1. Box 455.
Lucretia Dewberry (tame)
Vines, berries very large, sweet,
6, 60c. Miss . B. Moore, Suwa-
nee.
Want Spring Tooth Cultivator |,
$250 Ib. R. Chanelor
Hastings ssio
Everbearin, Strawb
$1. C. Exch, for
white; Black Walni
3, $1.; Also Garlic
ea.; $1, doz.; Peppermii
nip, $1. doz. Miss Ce
ley, Hartwell, Rt. 2.
Early large al
berry, 75 C;
p)
Stowers, sinewilie,
Sage Plants, 20c
Plants, Muscadine
Reece Hazlenut
1 postage.
Turner, Gainesville,
Rabbit-eye hucklebe:
bear first June un
10th. Seedless, hea
l5e ea. and
A. T. Milteer, Qui
Raspberry Plants, |
Blakemore Blackberry
Catnip, 25c bunch;
Vines, 4 ft. 40c ea.;
Bulbs, 40c doz. Plus
oe is Mashburm,
st
y
ae Strayber
70c C; 500, $3.; L
ake 60c C; 500, $2.50;
AP, Jones, Cummin;
Mtn. Huckleberry.
size, 2 doz., 75c; Large:
Strawberry, 50c C;
son Plum, and May
Sprouts, 2 1 fam x ue
Vines, 4 ea.
Rosie oro OW
,
age.
RET.
White
Wax O)
Kudzu cabelas $1. C; $9..Me
Covington.
Mrs. T. A. Hipp, Roopv
ee ee, ee ee ee ae. a
1 Charleston
orgia Green
ee ae ae
etter, Rt. 1.
d Charleston
and Collard,
.50 M. FOB.
. Metter, Rt.
State ' Cert.,
d right, $12.
$9. M; $1. C.
Roopville. ;
Roots and
at my place
fayette in Armuc-
rles A. Dean,
Plants, bear-
Wild Straw-
$1.; Yellow Root
Hazlenut Bush-
ee ee ee ee ee ee | ee ae
i ijay.
Wax Bermuda
(pencil size), 500,
DEL PP; 5 M
Exp. collect.
Satis. guar.
rald.
, bearing size,
be: Plants,
;, 65c doz.; Wild
., $1.; Yellow
De a I
ed Half Run-
50c large cup;
Peas, 25 1.;
aring Straw-
Rutger Tom-
Ib.; Calif. Wond-
Ib.; Stone and
mato, $1.40 lb.; 5
~ tb.; -Klondike
nts, 200, $1.10;
M. Del. No checks.
yainesville, Rt. 2.
nder Half Runner
Richey, Lavonia,
te Cutshort Corn-
55c cup; Little
king Rock, Rt. 2.
spedeza Seed, $2.
-color Plants, 2nd.
o less 2,000 plants
. McHargue, The
Box 14. =
ttle White Tender
Garden and White
$1.50 M. FOR. |
| postage. Mrs. | 2
Large White Half Runner
Bean Seed, 30c cup. Add post-
age. Mrs. Buford Edwards, Ball
pe | Ground, Rt. 1.
Tender Garden Bean Seed,
Striped Cream and White Half
Runner, Speckled and Creara
Cutshorts, Cornfield Beans, Lit-
|tle Pink >Peanut variety, 5Uc
-lcup. Exch. for print sacks: 2
cups for 4 print. Add postage.
te-|Cash orders. Mrs. Ivy Souther-
land, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Wakefield and Early Flat
Dutch Cabbage, Rutger Tomato
Seed, $1.35 lb; 4 lbs., $5.20;
Collard Seed, 85c lb. Lee Crow,
Gainesville, Rt. 2.
White Tender Half Runner,
Brown Striped Half Runner,
Bean Seed, 45c cup; Old
Fashion Bunch Okra and Curi-
ed Mustard, 30c cup. Del. Mrs.
Leilar Phillips, Royston, Rt. 1.
New White Eggplant,*60 seed,
15c PP. Mrs. T. M. Randolph,
Marietta, 409 Washington Ave.
Gourd seed, 50c C., or $1. tea-
cup full; Col. butterbean seed,
white Conch and purple hull
peas. 35c cupful; also Fig and
Peach trees, 25c and 50c size.
Mrs. W. E. Wooten, Camilla.
Kobe Lespedeza, No. 1 seed,
18c lb.; No. 2 seed, 10c Ib. FOB
my farm. G. W. Darden, Wat-
iN
*| kinsville.
Green Glaze collard seed, 20
C;| tbls, 6, thls. $1.; Willetts Wond-
er Eng. peas, 50c teacup; Col.
butterbeans, 25c lb.; Purple Hull
Crowder peas, 30c lb. Also
white Spanish peanuts, $1.59
pk. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin.
Red Speckled Crowder, White
Mush Peas, 35c cup; 4:cups, $1.;
Tender Okra Seed, 30c cup; 5
cups, $1. Exchange for sacks.
Add postage. Mrs. Carl Smith,
Ellijay, Rt. 3.
Tender White Creaseback,
imp. tender White Half Runner
Beans, 55 cup, PP. No checks.
Mrs. Viola Stover, Ellijay, Rt.
Purple Hull, and White
Crowder Peas, 4 cups, $1.25;
Early 6 Weeks Peas, 6 cups,
$1.25; Lady Peas, 3 cups, $1.;
Tender White and Streaked
Bean, 3 cups, $1.; 50c cup. No
COD or checks. Mrs. Lon Ash-
worth, Dacula.
About. 25 Ibs., pure Black
Diamond watermelon seed, hand
saved and selected, 80c lb: for
lot. J. H. Rush, Columbus, 2326
; | Lumpkin Rd.
Seed Cane, $20. and $25. per
one thousand stalks. W. W. Wil-
liams, Quitman.
4 bu. White Mush
slightly weeviled, 18c Ib.
W. J. Hardin, Davisboro.
Large, round yellow meat
eas,
OB.
;| watermelon seed, 35 seed for
10e and stamped _ envelope;
white mush peas, 25c; Martin
gourd seed, 10c doz. Add post-
age. Mrs. P. E. Taylor, Rebecca.
Cucumber, Hubbards crook-
neck, squash seed, 10c_ tbis.;
Hales- Best cantalowp, 50c cup-
ful. Add postage. Mrs. Clyd
Logan, Austell, Rt. 2.
er ce a en ena i Haan
| CORN AND SEED CORN
FOR SALE
Have 40 or 50 bu. corn for
sale. Mrs. O, H. Moore, Perry.
Fine Rice pop corn, 10 lbs.
$1.; 20 lbs. $2. Add postage.
ee B. H. Holland, Dalton,
150 bu. Dixie 18 corn, 1951
_{erop, $1.15 bu. at my farm. 8
mi. Milledgeville, on Sparta
ant Sam Babb, Milledgeville,
200 bu. corn, $2. bu. at my
home, 4 mi, So. Brooklet. Mrs.
J. W. Forbes, Brooklet, Rt. 2.
Hastings Prolific seed corn,
whit and yellow, Ist. yr. No.
140, $1. peck, $3.50 bu. FOB.
M. . or cash. L. A. Thompson,
Cumming, Rt. 4.
Marlboro (2-3 ears to stalix)
and Whatleys (2-4 ears to stalk)
seed corn, hand nubbed and
shelled, weevil and rot free,
$5. bu. $2.50 per 1/2 bu. $1.25
peck, Party pay del, chgs. No
cnecks. J. E. Locke, Butler, Rt.
2,000 bu. good Dixie 18 shel-
led yellow corn, $2.25 bu. at)
my barn. G. W. Layfield, Ella-
ville, Rt. 1. S
100 bu. corn, $2. bu. at my
barn. Walter F. Stewart, Robiv-
son, Rt. 1, Box 69, c/o Golden
Stewart. S
250-300 bu. good, 1951 white
corn, excellent for meal or feed,
$2. bu. at my farm. D. R. Power,
Danielsville, Rt. 1.
300-400 bu. slipped shuck
corn, $2. bu. No chks. A. C.
Deal, Plainville.
/
' Dynamite pop corn, 20c Ib.
jn 5 Ib. lots. Add postage. M. O.
or cash. J. G. Carrieth, Cum-
ming, Rt. 1.
LL
BEANS AND PEAS
FOR SALE
White Browneyed, Red Speck-
led, Pole Cat, Early Brown 6
Weeks Crowders, weevil treat-
-ed, 30c cup; 4 cups, $1. Add 20c
postage on $1. orders; Little
White Lady Peas, 3 cups, $1.15
Prepaid. Mrs. T. E. Richardson,
Bowdon, Rt. 1.
Imp. Running Lima Beans,
white, will bear until frost, 50c
cup plus postage. Mrs. S. A,
Verner, Hartwell, 535 E. Frank-
lin St.
Florida Crowder. Peas for sale.
Sample on request. James
Mason, Byron, Rt. 1.
White, Cream Half Runner,
Pink Peanut and White Pole
Beans, Browneyed Sugar Crowd-
er, 50c cup; English Peas, Salet
kind, 60c cup. Exch. for sacks
(5 white or print 2 cups), free
of holes, 100 Ib. cap. Mrs. Cliff
Silvers, Talking Rock. {
White, Cream Half Runner,
Little Pink Peanut, White Pole
Bean, tender, 55c cup; Brown
Sugar Crowders, 50c cup; Salet
Peas, 60c cup.- Exch. for good
100 lb. sacks, 5 white, or, 4
print for 2 cups. No checks.
Add postage. Jemima Crump,
Talking Rock, Rt. 2.
Cream Table Peas, 5 cups,
$1.; Red Bunch Butterbeans, 4
cups, $1.; Tender. Brown Bunch
Beans, 35c cup; $1. orders PP.
Mrs. A. Horsley, Waco, Rt. 2,
Box 40.
Striped Half Runner and
Tender Blue Pole Beans, 3 cups,
$1.25; White and col. Bunch
and col. Running Butterbeas,
4 cups, $1.25; Early Brown 6
Weeks 2 Crop Peas, 6 cups,
$1.25; Little White Lady Peas,
3 cups, $1. Add postage. Mrs.
Clarence McMillian, Dacula, Rt.
Striped Tender Half Runner
Beans, large variety, treated,
free of weevils, and Black Corn-
field, 40c measuring cup. Add
postage. No stamps. Mrs. S, H.
Floyd, Lavonia. :
Good tender White Half Run-
ner Garden Beans, 50c cup;
Blue Java Peas, 30c lb. 5 lb.
lots; Mung Beans, 35c lb, 5 lb.
lots. Add postage. P. B. Brown,
Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
Old time early tender speck-
led, also white Half Runner
garden beans, 50c cupful. Add
postage. Miss Gennia Brown,
Ball Ground, Rt. 1.
Good, tender garden beans,
white and striped, Half Run-
ners, brown and pink, 6-wks.,
all 50c cupful and _ postage.
Exch. for feed sacks. Mrs. Eula
Beal, Ellijay, Rt. 3.
cetacean eee NT
COTTON SEED FOR SALE
5 tons Cotton Seed, D. P, &
L., 15 strains, Ist. year, kept
pure at gin, $10. Cwt.: Also
Peas,, 12 bu. Barbs, 3 bu. White
Crowders, 2 bu. Black Crowders
for sale. Make offer. McArthur
Glass, Buena Vista.
Hybred Half and Half Cotton
Seed, Ist. year, pure, sound,
reasonable price. F. H. Bunn,
Midville.
Cokers 100 wilt resisting
cottonseed, Cert. with the Blue
Tag, $10. per 100 lbs. FOB. R.
Rf. Aycock, Monroe. a
3 or 4 bu. ea. Blackeyed and}.
-|COTTON SEED FOR SALE
2 tons Coker 100 Cotton Seed,
kept pure at gin. $10. Cwt. Sam
Pelfrey, Dalton, Rt. 1.
700 lbs. Cotton Seed, Coker
100, second year, $6. Cwt. O. E.
Darnell, Jefferson, Rt. 3.
D. P. L. No. 15. Cotton Seed,
96.50 Pct. germ., $10. Cwt. FOB.
Dwain Cheek, Lavonia.
Pure recleaned Empire Wilt
Resistant, Big Boll Cottonseed,
grown from foundation seed,
picked dry, ginned one variety
gin, 8c lb. Riley C. Couch,
Turin,
About 2,000 lbs. No. 15 DPL
Cotton Seed, Ist. year, picked
dry, ginned dry, roll dropped
at gin to keep pure, $10.50 Cwt.;
About 450 lb. No. 15 DPL,
treated, delinted, 2 yr. old, 1st.
year, .$ll.. Cwti MO: U. .
Stancill, Eastanollee. a
Cokers 100 wilt resistant,
direct every year, pure, sound,
ger. 85 Pct. cottonseed, picked
without dew or rain, (made
57 bales on 50 acres), $8. per
100 lb. bag. H. P. Malcom, Social
Circle, Rt. 2. ;
Gokers 100 wilt resistant
cottonseed, Cert. Blue Tag, 1st
yr., 90 pet. Ger., purity 99 pct.,
bagged in new white cotton
bags, machine delinted and
treated with Ceresan, $8. per
100 lbs. Joe D. Murrow, Farm-
ington. Phone 2948.
GRAIN AND HAY
FOR SALE
Several tons bright Soy Bean
Hay, $40. ton; Other Hay $35.
ton; Also Seed, Martins Com-
bine and Coprock Grain Sorg-
hum, $5. Cwt. R. D. Tatum,
Palmetto.
150. bales good mixed Bean
and Grass Hay, 75c per bale at
barn. W. M. Bailey, Chick-
amauga, Rt. 2.
12 or 15 tons Bright Peanut
Hay, plenty of peanuts left in
hay, without rain, $30. ton.
Write or Phone. E. L. Preetorius,
Statesboro, P. O. Box 354.
Good Bean Hay, 2 1/2 or 3
tons, $40. ton. At W. B. Moi-
gans place. H. L.-Evans, Sum-
merville, Rt. 4.
1,000 bales Soybean Hay,
extra good, $50. ton at farm.
T. R. Thornton, Jonesboro, P.
O. Box 1390.
Several truckloads real Bright
Peanut Hay for. sale or exch.
for cattle. R. C. Dale, Dawson.
.75 tons 1951 crop Peanut hay,
bright, No. 1 quality. Write for
prices. Can del. in trailer load
lots. Marvin A. Burke, Asa-
burn, Rt. 1.
New crop, good bright Pea-
nut hay, $22. ton at my barn.
Will del. at extra cost. Jang2s
ae Ashburn, Rt. 2, Box
PECANS AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Muscadine Grape Vines,
Crabapple trees, Sage plants,
20c ea.; 6, $1.00; Hazelnut, 6,
$1.00; Beechnut, 25c ea.; Garlic
Bulbs, Blueberry Bushes, 75c
doz. Rooted. Add postage. Mrs.
Herat B. Boling, Gainesville,
Blueberry, 75c doz.; Beech-
nut, Hazelnut, 6, $1.00; Musca-
dine Vines, Crabapple trees,
and Sage plants, 20c ea.; 6, $1.;
May Cherry, 25 ea.; Himalaya
Blackberry, Garlic bulbs, 75
doz. Add postage. Mrs. Robert
H., Norrell, Gainesville, Rt. 6.
Apple, Peach, Pear, Cherry,
Chesnut trees, -Grape vines, at
low prices. State inspected.
List free. T. M. Webb, Ellijay.
State insp. leading variety
apple trees, 2 yr., 3-5 ft., 30c
ea.; Pear, 4-5 ft., 50c ea.; Grape
Vines, Concord, Lutie, 1l5c ea,;
$10.00 C; Scuppernong Vines,
25c ea. PP. W. H. Alexander,
Cleveland, Rt. 5.
Pecan trees: Govt. insp.
Schley, Stuart, Moneymakers,
2-8 ft., $2.00; 8-4 ft. $2.25; 4-5
ft., $2.50; 5-6 ft., $2.75; 6-8 ft.
$3.00. Calvin Harman, Stovall.
PECAN AND OTHER
FRUIT TREES FOR SALE
Early Red and Yellow Plum,
Old Fashion press Peach, Wild
Cherry, Everbearing Purple
Fig, French Mulberry, Browns
Scuppernong Vine, Muscadine
Vine, Sweet Pomegranate, 50c
ea. Plus postage. Exch. for
print or white sacks. Mrs. J.
G. Combs, Toomsboro, Rt. 2.
Tung Oil trees, 2 yrs. old, $3.
doz. Exch. for chickens or oth-
er farm value can use. A. J.
Grimes, Glenwood, P. O. Box
44.
Silver Maple, 5 for $1.40;
Bronze Scuppernong. cuttings,
Rooted Goose. plums, Currants,
50c doz.; Also blackberry. plants,
6 for 50c. Add postage. M. O. or
cash. Mrs. Effie Smith, Austell,
Rt. 3, Box 353.
Elberta peach trees, 50c ea.
Mrs. Annie Hubbard, Fortson.
Top soil early white mus-
cadine, excellent, and Tarheel
pollinating heavy. bearing black
both new var, 85c ea. also 6
Creek, 3 Hunt, and 2 Ducet,
65c ea. not del. Mrs. Lona Tal-
lent, Lula.
Muscadine and scuppernong,
grape vines, $1.50 doz; pear
trees, hazelnut, $1. doz.; blue-
berry, 75c doz. crabapple, Mtn.
huckleberry, and strawberry
plants, 75 doz.; Kudzu Crowns,
$1.25 C; $10. M. Mrs. James
Waters, Dahlonega. Rt. 1.
One year old Fig bushes, big
white kind, 25c ea. plus post-
age. Mrs. J. R. Denton,, Atlanta,
724 Ashby St. S. W.
rR LN
PEANUTS AND PECANS.
FOR SALE
Neen EEE EE ESaEEEREEEEEER
Hand picked peanuts, no
stems, $6. bu. No less a peck
shipped. Add postage. Mrs.
Hoke Golden, Bremen, Rt. 2,
Box 25.
150 lbs. mixed Pecans, 20
lb. FOB. W. S. Cox, Griffin, Rt.
c:
75 lbs. sound Stewart Pecans,
1951 crop, 25c lb. FOB. W. J-
Hardin, Davisboro.
Large Red Peanuts, 2-4 in
hull, $2. peck; $6.50 bu.; Black
Walnuts, hulled and dry, $2.50
bu. Add postage. G. T. Brown,
Ball Ground, Rt. 1. ;
Stewart, Columbia Pecans,
25c lb.; Schleys, 35c Ib. A. J.
Grimes, Glenwood, P. O. Box
5 Ibs. Stuart Pecans, 51 crop,
sound, dry, 35c 1b. PP within.
150 miles. Add 2c per pound
over 150 miles; 10 lbs. Seed=
lings. 20c Ib. PP; Also Reclean-
ed Wheat in good bags, $3. bu.
FOB. N. E. Reid, Hartwell, Rt.
3.
Large White Spanish Peanuts,
from. certified seed, several
hundred bu. for seed, $3.75 bu.
FOB. W. C. Oliver, Valdosta,
Rt. 1, Box 228. Tel. 466-W-10.
HONEY BEES AND BEE
SUPPLIES FOR SALE
i
Choice Gallberry Tupelo
Comb Honey, 12-2 1/2 lb. jars,
uv: 24-1 Ib. jars, $6. per, case.
J. W. Lunsford, Ludowici.
4 hives Italim Bees in 2
standard 10 frame deep supers,
new, well wintered, no disease,
$15. ea. W. P. Lynn, Washing-
ton, Rt. 1, Box 33.
Gallberry Strained Honey,
mixed with wild flowers, Case
12-2 1/2 lb. jars. $5.50; Cs. 6-5
lb. jars, $5.30; Cs. 24- Ib. jars.
$4.50; One 60 Ib. can, $8.50. FOB.
Allen C. Herrin, Hortense.
12-2 1/2 lb. jars, Chunk Comb
Honey, $7.; 12-2 1/2 lb. Big
Mouth Jars Extracted, $6.50; 6-
5 Ib. jars Extracted, $6.50;
Several large Bbls, Honey.
Price on application. John A.
Crummey, Jesup, P. O. Box
117;
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE i:
ARTICHOKES:
Sev. bu. Artichokes,
plus Express Chgs, Mrs.
atts, Hollywood.
4, ba.
tewart
as
Tes,
(Continued from Page One)
ELSE THEY WILL IMPAIR DOMESTIC
PRODUCTION, DISRUPT THE STOR-
ING AND MARKETING SYSTEM DUR-
ING FLUSH PRODUCTION, OR RE-
SULT IN UNNECESSARY EXPENDI-
TURES UNDER THE PRICE SUPPORT
PROGRAM.
In the face of these official findings of
the Secretary, it is indeed unseemly for.
the protagonists of free trade to argue
that imports will not harm: the dairy
farmer.
American dairy farmers, faced with
high costs, shortages of labor.and ma-
terials, and relatively high prices for
competing farm products, cannot con-
tinue to produce milk in competition
with uncontrolled imports from countries
where labor is cheap and standards of
living much lower. It has been argued
that what ever country can produce a
product the cheapest should take the
market. Regardless of the merit this
argument may have under very special
circumstances which rarely exist, this is
NOT the time to trade off a dependable,
well-established, domestic source of sup-
ply of essential foods for a foreign source
which could be lost to us over night in
the event of full scale war.
3. Other laws inadequate. One of the
most frequent arguments advanced for
the repeal of Section 104 is that other
laws are adequate to control imports,
such as Section 22 of the Agricultural
Adjustment Act, Section 7 of the Trade
Agreements Extension Act of 1951, Sec-
tion 101 of the Defense Production Act,
and the escape clause-in the trade agree-
ments.
_ The best answer to this argument is
the fact that all these provisions were in
effect before Section 104 was passed, yet
in actual practice they proved wholly in-
- adequate to meet the situation.
In general Section 22 of the Agricul-
tural. Adjustment Act authorizes import
controls when imports interfere with
price support or other agricultural pro-
grams of the Department of Agriculture.
An improvement was made in the law in
1951 by providing that trade agrements
may not be applied in a manner incon-
sistent with Section 22.
In order to invoke controls under Sec-
tion 22 the Secretary of Agriculture must
have reason to believe that. imports will -
interefere with any domestic agricultural
program and so advise the President. If
the President agrees that there is reason
for such belief he refers the matter to the
Tariff Commission. The Tariff Commis-
sion makes an investigation to determine
such facts, If onthe basis of such in-
vestigation and report to him the Presi-
dent finds the existence of such fact, he
must impose import controls. Maximum
control under Section 22 is a quota equal
to 50 percent of ippons in a representa-
tive period.
Interminable delays occur under Sec-_
tion 22. The tree nut growers experience
is an excellent example. An application
~for relief was filed with the Secretary of
Agriculture in 1948 and denied. Another
application was made and denied. In
1950 the Secretary recommended and an -
investigation was made by the Tariff
Commission. No relief was granted. The
Commission reopened hearings in Sep-
tember 1951. Some relief was finally se-
cured on December 10, 1951. It was too
late to be fully effective. Could dairying -
expect any faster treatment under Sec-
tion 22? .
Section 7 of the Trade Agreements Ex-
tension Act of 1951 is a form of escape
clause written into law for the first time
on June 16, 1951. It authorizes import
controls under certain conditions when
serious injury is threatened by increased
imports which result in whole or in part
from concession granted in a trade agree-
ment. }
Under Section 7, the Tariff Commis- ~
sion has a year in which to make an in-
vestigation and report to the President
that serious injury will result if imports
are not controlled. Even though it may
have been determined that serious injury
will result, the President may or may not |
control imports as he sees fit, but must
report to Congress his reason for: not do-
ing so. ;
Section 101 of the Defense Production
Act centains the broad power of alloca-
tion. A similar power in Title III of the
Second War Powers Act of 1942 was
used to control imports until it expired
July 31, 1951. Included in those controis
were rice, flax, and butter. When the
old 1942 law was about to expire,~ the
Department of Agriculture shifted im-
port controls of rice. and flax to Section
101 of the Defense Production Act, and
use import controls if he doe
Agreement has not proven effecti
OTHER FALLACIOUS ARGU! A
mestic production were down-
trol ee ene idee on
The State Department takes
tion that while Section 101
under very limited conditions,
be in violation of the trade
The same Sere applies .
22. :
One of the icancineeee on
agreements is that in order to
imports of agricultural produ
responding control must be im
domestic production. For e
imports are to be reduced 25 p
low a represenative period, then
production must be also reduc
percent. Since there is no aut
applying domestic production con
dairy products, this condition co
be complied withaside from +
that we simply do not dare to
mestic production in the pres
gency. : oes
- The escape clause in the
actual operation. Many applicatio
relief under it have been made, but
actually was eee in ay 01
stance.
In weighing the aeons
laws, consideration should be
1. Their failure to provide effec
tro] during the recent potato di
fact that 56 million- pounds 0
imported in 1950 while at th a
the Government had to pure
million pounds under the price
program. 3. When the old c
was expiring and destructi
were impending, no controls
were provided until after Sect
was passed.
IN SUPPORT OF REPE
OF SECTION 104
1. Relation of imports to dom
duction. It has been argued
trols are unncessary beca
imports in 1950 were equal only
5 percent of domestic pode
not the relation of imports to
production that is important but
lation of imports to total demand.
mand high, imports might be ~
MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS ' MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS - MISCELL
FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR: SALE FOR: SALE": FOR s
1 / ai ec
Jersalem Artichokes, 1/2 ba. /GOQURDS: Hickory smoked Meat: hams,! 25 bu. Bunch potatoes, for;SACKS:
. QMlin. 221. Ibs.) $3. Inquire for | ~~ 20 lbs, $16.; 15 Ibs. $12.50; bacon | eating or ceed: Keeping fine;| 3 3.44 colors
quantity prices. Wm. R. Kd- Gourds, er dozen: Martin, | sides, 12 rics $8.; link sausage, not rotten. R. L. Cook, Ellaville, | ;: 1.45: 10
Gace Newser. Phone ot $3.; Battle, $2.50; ornamental, | 85 1b., also 25 1b, can. lard, | Rt. 3. eae Poise, a
$2.; asst. small mixed, $1.50: | $9. Postpaid. J. .K. Stalevp,| ROOTS AND HERBS: :
FRUIT (FRESH AND DRIED):
Nice, sundried apples, no peel} cules Club), 25 pkt., 10 pkts.|
or core, 40c lb. in 3 lb. lots, PP} $2. Postpaid. Earl Stuckey, | Sugar cured hams, 75 Ib. J. 50c doz.:
oo Mrs. Walter Mashburn, | Blackshear. jae Clark, Resaca, Rt. 1. : ete
on. =
Mest add DN gs, POTATOES (SEED AND plants, $1.
6, Lyruniied aid apples ast sitha eget Eateae, ERTING)
50c Ib., 5 Ib. and up lots Post- [large 50 ea. Mrs. W. E. Wooten,| P. R. seed potatoes from Cert.
ams ne z Clint Johnston, Camilla. plants Ist yr., (every plant in| Box 60.
Pees seek Ss | patch bunch), $3. bu. in 10 bu,| Wild cherry,
1951 crop, nice, peeled, free Gourds, small, 5 to 20 ea.;/| lots, 25 or more bu., $2.50 du.
from core, sundried Stark s | Seed of Martin and small mixed | At my curing aise on farm, 3
apples, worm-free, 3 1/2 lbs. gourds, 15c package. Mrs. John}3 mi. Warner Robins. James colts foot,
del. to 8rd zone for $3.50. M. O.| Weaver, Temple, Rt. 2. | Mason, Byron, Rt. 1, (Elberta/root, 3 Ibs.
| aiso: gourd seed (including Hev- |
Marietta, Rt. 5.
Catnip,
mint, balm, tasy, garlie busus;
Also Mastodon straw-
berry plants, 75 C; horseradish,
doz. Nice sundried
apples, worm-free, 50 lb. Mrs.
Martha White, Dahlonega, Rt. 1,
oak, sweet gum, pine bark, yel- |.
low dock, sarsaparilla, sassafras,
poke and _ yellow
$1.; Mullein, 25c
horehound, pepper-
Sacks, good cond.
letters or mildew,
4, $1. plus 17e pos
washed and not: w:
3, $1. Lots of 12 PP.
sundried apples. Mrs.
ley, Alpharetta, Rt. 4,
Extra large 100
chicken. feed sac
Orders $5. up _ post
Prints, 33 ea: All-free
red and white
or currency. Mrs. Estelle Wii- : Road). Phone Warner Robins,| bunch; finest Gem _ strawberry not
ein: coiled: Wii- | HICKORY NUTS: 1 1469- es a plants, $1. C. Mrs. John Myers, | and mildew, but z
Paper shell Hickory Nuts, Hartwell, Rt. 2. No chks. or COD. Mr
FEATHERS: ;extra good, large meat kind,| Cert. Bunch P. R. seed sweet! SUGAR CANE: Clark, Gainesville,
Turkey feathers, free of wing | |25 Ib. Billy Joe Roberts, Mar-_ potatoes, -grown by 4-H Club Georgia Green Sugar Cane, OBACCO:
and tail, 50c lb. del. Z. J. Lee, fa Feta Members, foundation stoe/|ave. 6 ft. long, with about 15 AYP. 3
Red Oak. | MEATS: from Coastal Plains Exp. Sta-| eyes to a stalk, five cents per| Ga. raised, flu
; g : : | tion, supervised by Co. Agt. Nv. | stalk at the hank; ship by. Frt., | crop Tobacco: che
.. Nice, new, white feathers, 702 Country :ured hams, shovid-j 1's, $6.; 2nd. No. 2s $6. bu.)} or Exp. plus wrapping and $1.50 smo!
bh. del. Sample on request. Mrs.|ers, middlings, priced right.|FOB. Order from, J. Harold charges. S. J. Foss, Brooklet, | in
y Collins, Gainesville, Rt. 1.|Sam Pelfrey, Dalton, Rt. 1. : Rt 2
Brown, Co. Agt. Moultrie.
Rt. 1. (Denmark).
of 5 percent without caus-
hee domestic produc-
the demand, a small amount
ded to the domestic surplus
havoc. | This is because the
uld set te Price for-the whole
irols because no one would
he imports would stop. A
id adjust itself more readily
| imports _ of 5 percent than it,
nited imports which Reet
o be only 5 percent.
tion by other countries. It
sued that other countries will
ainst our use of Section 104,
ur agricultural exports there-
fer. As a matter of fact, Sec-
vides only a fair and reason-
of ee controls. ee
c
104, eight are controlling their
ports; the ninth has used such
since the new trade agreement
nd the tenth is not a pay
al trade agreement.
tional good will. We are not
ith the argument that inter-
sndship has to be bought at
the American dairy farmer.
tries whose friendship goes
he dollar sign should not
ct us to take the dairy im-
els which would impair our
ce of supply, disrupt the
arketing system . for
ion season, or result.in un-
xpenditures Sie the price
gram.~ ~
try would, not fie very pop-
insisted on forcing our exports
ntries at levels which
or destroy their. essential
have refrained-from do-
ve recognized the right of
eir dollar balances.
id = ecu, true s if there
-the s
ies to control their imports .
milk and butterfat and start now to de-
pend on unpredictable volumes from for-
eign imports for such essential items.
5. Trade agreements. All of the argu-
ment that has been stirred up about Sec-
tion 104 being a violation of the trade
agreement simply is not true.
The General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade contains the following exception:
Nothing in this agreement shall be con-
struedto prevent any contracting party
from taking any action which it considers
necessary for the protection of its es-
sential security intereststaken in time
of war or other emergency in SEE
tional relations, .
6. The dainymay s stake in the ce
market. Some proponents of repeal of
the import control authority argue that,
since agricultural exports exceed agricul-
tural imports, dairymen stand to gain by
unlimited imports.
In normal times, dairy product exports
are negligible. Jn 1939, imports were
larger than exports, but war and post-
war supply programs have led to export
volumes markedly larger than imports.
There has been a marked recovery in
dairying in European countries, and it is
to be expected that U. S. dairy exports
will decline in the next few years.
Most of our exports during normal pe-
riods are accounted for by shipments of
dairy products to Central and South
American countries and countries in the
Pacific Basin. It is to be expected that
such norma] trade relations will again
become the order of the dav in the near
future.
It is IMPROPER to quote export-im-
port trade balances as proof of the need
for unrestricted trade. Since the war
this country has made grants of billions
of dollars to foreign countries under the
_ Marshall Plan. From April 1948 through
-June 1951 purchase approvals have
amounted to 11 billion, 663 million dol-
lars for Western European countries. Of
this sum, food and agricultural commodi-
ties accounted for 5 billion, 127 million
dollars. The Economic Cooperation Ad-
ministration reports showed that, through
June 30, 1951 about 1.6 billion dollars
were approved for bread grains, 403.3
products, 130.7 eine dollars for meat,
118.3 million dollars for dairy products,
59.4 million dollars for feed, 48.5 million
dollars for fertilizer, 36.5 million for
fruits and nuts, and 1 billion, 388 million
dollars for cotton. :
With this record of vast grants of dol-
lars, it should be obvious that the recent
ratio of imports to exports does not re-
flect normal trade conditions.
REPEAL OF SECTION 104 WOULD
ENDANGER PRICE SUPPORT
PROGRAMS
Unlimited imports of dairy products
into the United States during the conduct -
of price support programs are the height
of nonsense. The fact that a price sup-
port program exists_indicates that the
Congress and the Administration think
it necessary to support prices in order to
maintain full production in this country.
From 1949 to September, 1951, price
support purchases of butter were 242
million, .399 thousand pounds, of which
over 142 million pounds were resold in
domestic trade channels, with the re-
mainder disposed of largely to School
Lunch and domestic and foreign chari-
table institutions. For cheese, purchases
during the period were over 135 million
pounds, of which 33.5 million pounds
were resold to the domestic trade, 72.6
million pounds were negotiated export
sales, and distribution to domestic and
foreign welfare institutions. was 29 mil-
lion pounds. Of the 722.5 million pounds
of non-fat dry milk solids. purchased un-
der price support, over 334 million
pounds were disposed of through negoti-
ated export sales, and 126 million pounds
were donated to foreign welfare agen-
cies. (In addition, about 103 million
pounds were disposed of for feed.)
Estimated losses incurred by the Com-
modity Credit Corporation on export
sales and foreign and domestic donations
were 48.3 million dollars for butter, 25
million dollars for cheese, and 58.2 mil-
lion dollars for non-fat dry milk solids.
Total losses amounted to 131.5 million:
dollars. :
If unlimited imports are permitted,
the price support program will either be
discontinued, prices will be set at the
lowest statutory level, or our price sup-
security. Surely it would million dollars for coarse grains, 343.5 port program will operate so that we will
1 the present emergency to. million dollars for. fats and oils, 305.7 be supporting. prices of dairy products
domestic source of supply of | million dollars for sugar and_ related all over the world ;
,ANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS CATTLE FOR SALE | CATTLE FOR SALE
WANTED WANTED : St |
: Jersey-Guernsey Male Year- nae reg. in aes one
EGGS: ' Want 250 lbs Rescue (not Fes: | ling, 6 mos. old, 1 Jersey Heifer,} Bull, 1 yr. old, 00. Phone DE
Want 2 cues: Behe Bp cue) seed, recleaned and certi-|3 mos. old, $70. for both at} 2611. Wm. W. Smith, Decatur,
turkey eggs, the last February fied <b Ss Brown, Atlanta, 731 }my farm. No letters. Russ | 3550. Glenwood Rd.
$ & Elkmont Di oN Ee Whelchel, Dawsonville, Rt. 2. | Pure Jersey: Cow, freshen a=
] 0 10; Se ath
ok Sache Ellis, HAY:
Ww, icy black
$1. Qt. black
and dry, $2.
eS ae M. Pe
nut Hay.
PLAN' TS:
= Want - 12 Mis aPs. oR: Soratae : |
plants, to be del. not later than
April 10th, want in lots of 4 |
M. ea, Write. Raiford Prueit,
oe nice,
- Jarge pieces, B0c
e. Mrs. Myrtie
clean,
Milan, Rt, 73,
POP CORN:
Summerville, Rt. 4.
SEED:
\or March - Ist. Advise. Mrs.
Monticello, RFD 3.
Want 3 or 4 tone eoak Pea-
Clarence Thornton,
Jonesboro, Phone 4612.
Want fe dozen long ears of
Red pop corn. Hanes A Dean,
Want 1 Jb. ea. Hot pepper and
Ruby King sweet pepper, and
1/2 lb. Pimiento seed. Sample
;|and prices. J. Howard Smith,
veupaaacs ~ So. Pryor re
About
pop seed or the dried fruit, also
| small seedling pecans. Contact:
Hubert Chambers, Canton. Box |
488.
CATTLE FOR SALE
Reg. Horned, Halter Broken |
bloodline, calved Mar. 13, 195!,
| weighed 510 lbs. Nov. 1, 1951,
good head, excellent marking
and conformation, outstanding
short, thick, deep neck. Carl
Roberts, Ball Ground.
One reg. Polled Hereford Bull,
12 mos. old, sired by AV Larry
Domino 10th., 800 lbs., $400.
Or trade for reg. Hereford Cow.
Benson Barnes, Mableton. Tel.
. Austell 2430-4195.
sey,
750-800
Want peach seed, also may- heal old, 3 1/2-4 gal
$200. T. R. Thornton, Jonesboro,
| P. O. Box 1390.
4 Reg., Polled Hereford pulls | Phillips, McRae, Rt. 2.
5 | for sale. E. A. Pavy, Jr.,
ee eo Ea c/o Double F Ranch.
17 ve Old-oF tiie est: breed-| W.
ing, $300. Will eve. for Polled | 333
Heifer of similar value and as
Hereford Bull Calf of Mixer; 800d breeding. C. S. Floyd,}and 2 heavy, for sale. Walker
Loganville.
One purebred Jersey Bull, a- | 6209.
round 1,000 Ibs.,
Thurmond Jones, Register, RF-| calf, 2 mos.
15 heavy springers, freshen, |
during next 2 mos. bred to fuil
blooded Holstein bull;
Jersey,
calves. No culls. See at farm, 3
mi. Cartersville. Dr. J. W. Stan-
ford, Cartersville.
Ibs. Calf, 1)round April or May, 2nd. calf,
., well fed, cs sale. Come after at my place
on Cedar Park Hwy. from Mc-
| Rae, 4 or 5 miles. Mrs. Charlie
Lump- Jersey heifer, bred to Holste:n
|freshen in April, 2 yrs. old,
Reg. Polled: Hereford: bull, 3|%200. Contact: Lavaughn Cato,
nee Springs. Rt. 1, Phone
-R.
2 fresh cows and 6 springers,
Waldrip, Forsyth, Rt. 1, Phone
purebred Guernsey dull
old, from heavy
| milker, eligible for reg. for
}sale. Mrs. W. M. Cantrell,
; | Marietta, RFD 1.
Guern- A fine Ayershire Heifer io
and mixed first drop calf about March Ist. Call
DE. 5052, or write: Cullen B. .
GosnelJ, Atlanta, 1162 Oxford
ean E
2
$250. Contairt: | 1
HOGS FOR SALE
3 reg. Short Horn Cows, two
6 yrs. old, other 4 yrs. old, one
feesh with heifer calf; other two
to freshen in 30 days; Also some
Grade Cows ready to freshen;
and one Grade Bull, 15 mos.
- gid. See: G. C. Martin, Gaines-
ville, Rt. 7.
Several reg. young Aberdeen-
Angus Bulls, good breeding and
od individuals for sale. R. A.
urch, Eastman.
6 reg Polled Hereford Heifers,
10-12 mos. old, Rollo Domino
pedigree,, choice foundation
stock, $300. ea. Dr. Thomas J.
Hicks, McCaysville, c/o Green
Acres Stock Farm.: Phone 62 J.
10 Holstein Heifers, 8 Grade
~ Jersey and Guernsey Springers,
4 reg Guernsey Heifers for saie.
5897. Tommie Etris, Ros-
well,
Reg. Polled Hereford Bulls,
Domino breeding for sale or
exch. for some good individuals
ready for service. F. M. Big-
- gers, Conyers.
Hereford Bull, about 1,000 Ibs.
or over $250. at my farm on
Middle Ground Rd. Sam_ Rk.
oo Louisville, Rt. 3, Box
123.
Reg. Hereford Bulls, 2 horn-
ed, 3 polled bulls, ranging in
age from 7 months to 21 months
old, good stock. Reasonable
price. Clarence R, McLanahan,
Elberton, Box 760.
fe
HOGS FOR SALE
Very fine SPC herd boar, al-
so young males, and gilts. Best
bloodlines, cholera immune and
reg, buyers name. C. R. Mor-
. gan, Americus.
OIC gilt pigs, short nose,
blocky type, 55-60 lbs. ea. $25.
ea, or. special discount on 2 or
more. All from Champion blood-
lines and reg. buyers name.
Ship anywhere. J. H. Roque-
more, Americus. Rt. 2.
SP Chinas, best of breeding,
3-4 mos. old, boars. and gilts,
reg. in buyers name in Nation-
al Record Assoc. R. L. Johnson,
Summit, Rt. 1.
Purebred SPC Shoats, 3 1/2
- mos, old, fine stock, also some
erossed Shoats for sale. See:
Mrs. Viola C. Brady, Cairo, Rt.
1 Box. 343.
6 FFA Duroc Males, 2 Gilts,
around 100 Ibs. each, blocky,
cherry red, papers in buyers
name, $35. ea. 3 mi, N. Ashburn
on Hwy. 41. Call any day except
Saturday. Eugene Burke, Ash-
burn, Rt. 1. :
Purebred OIC sow, sub. to
Reg. bred to reg. P C 2 yrs.
old, had 2 litters (10 and 9 in
litter). $100. FOB my place,
Cant ship. T. L. Mancock, Sura-
merville.
Tamworth pigs, gilts, sows
* and boar. Reg. buyers name,
treated against cholera, and
cD eoice of champion bloodlines
aed, to select from. John P. Demp-
gey, Rome. Rt. 2.
SPC Boars, ready for April
and May service, some of the
breeds finest reg. of Merit of
Champion Ohio blood, bacon,
blocky type, immune. Ship with
papers. L. G. Owensby, Tennilie,
Rt. 2. c/o Top Spot Farm.
Reg. PC Boar, 10 mos. old,
make offer. John Munro,
Sharpsburg, Rt. 1.
*% Tamworth Boars,
: name, for sale. George H. Lov-
ing Jr., Americus, Rt. 1.
Reg. Hampshire Breeding
Stock Pigs, (male or gilt) for |
$35. ea. W.
ville.
D. Young, Homer-
OIC Sow, about 400 lbs., bred
OIC Gilt,
about 90 Ibs. $40. Subj. to reg.
to. reg. SPC, $85.;
Jack Love, Fitzgerald, Rt. 4.
8-12 wks. old OIC Pigs, short
nose, blocky type, reg. in buy-
$25. shipped any-
C. Burnett,
ers name,
where. Thomas
~SzeQuitman, RFD 3.
Registry of Merit SPC Pigs,
from Champ. bloodlines, cholera
immuned, wormed, crated, re
in buyers name, $35.-$40. FO
Anatall
i ready for
service, treated, reg. in buyers
Satis. guar, James A. Yancey,
Reg. Hereford Male Pigs, 4
mos. old, $35. ea. C. M. Lane,
Colquitt.
SPC Male and. Females, 12
wks. old, reg. buyers name,
$25. ea. at my home. Felton
Turner, Hahira, Rt. 1.
Durocs. of good breeding;
Pigs, 8 wks. old, either sex, $25.;
12-14 wks., $30.; Few good open
Gilts, 6 mos. old, $50.; One Giit,
bred to farrow Mar. 2nd., $75.
All reg. United Duroc Record
Assn. in buyers name. FOB.
Ship anywhere. Phone 1443 J.
James E. Taylor, Waycross, Rt.
iv
OIC Pigs, male and female,
8 wks. old, from prize winning
stock, short nose, blocky, rez.
in buyers name, $20. ea. Ready
to ship in February. Mack Pat-
rick, Voc. Ag. Teacher, Rabun
Gap.
One reg. Berkshire Boar with
papers, 11 mos. old, $50. Robevt
H. Johnson, Loganville, Rt. 2,
(Near Grayson).
One Duroc Jersey Male Hog,
15 mos. old, 350 lbs. Can furnish
papers. Sell at my farm. Ans.
letters. E. T. Mathis, Avera.
(Near LaGrange).
Best bloodlines Cherry Red
Duroc Boars, 5 mos. old, Dam-
Miss Cherry 228741, prize win-
ner all State Duroc Champ.
overall breeds, Lowndes: Co.
Fair 1950. $45. ea. Phone 340-
og Se J. Harnage, Valdosta,
ne 9s
35 full blooded Hampshire:
Pigs, 8-10 wks, old, weaned,
well marked but not reg. $10.
ea. at farm. J. W. Stanford, M.
D., Cartersville, Cherokee Ave.
prize winning stock, Reg. buy-
ers name, 8 wks. to 4 mos. old,
$25. to $40. ea. Ship anywhere.
st, guar. No COD. Also pigs,
for. meat, at my home, $12.50
ae up. H. J. Dupree, Acworth,
us 2.
Fine healthy 8 wks. old OIC
and Big Bone Guinea Crossed
Pigs, very large for age, $15.
ea.; 2, $25. C. W. Holloway, Ben
Hill, 7205 Campbellton Rd. At-
lanta, Phone FR 2736. | 4
Little Black African Guinea
Pigs, $15. ea. at home; $16. ea.
shipped. Ready Feb. 15. Wilson
ho Griffin, Rt. C, Zebulon
SPC Pigs, all ages, from
Breeds best bloodlines, $30. up;
Also 3 yr. old Breeding Boar,
exc. condition, 1,000 lbs., $75.
All reg. papers guaranteed. Geo.
Brownlee Jr. Ben Hill, c/o
Sandra-La Farm, Atlanta Phone
FR. 1802.
3 purebred Black PC Male
Pigs, reg., in buyers name, Med.
type, $30. ea.; At my place.
FOB. R. P. McCorkle, Buena
Vista. a7
15 head nice Cherry Red Full
Blooded Duroc-Jersey Shoats,
male and female, $12.50-$25. ea.
FOB. $1.50 ea. extra if shipped.
W. A. Moore, Haddock, Rt. 1. _
21 OIC Pigs, 3/4 to thorough-
bred, $10. ea.; Ready first week
in March; Also bred Sows for
Feb. farrowing. Mrs. S. A.
Spe Palmetto, Rt. 1, Phone
1 litter 9 Pigs farrowed Dec.
22ud., Litter 6 Pigs farrowed
Dec. 26th., litter 10 pigs, farrow-
ed Jan. 18th., all pigs, Tam-
worth and OIC cross, $10. ea.
at farm. Trade for yellow corn,
calves, or anything farm value.
J. O. Brown, Nacoochee.
HORSES AND MULES
FOR SALE
Bay Mare, 4 yrs. old, broke to
ride and work some, $125, R.
J. Williams, Jesup, Rt. 1, Box 32.
One Mare Mule, 8 yrs. old,
about 1250 lbs., blocky built,
gentle, work anywhere, cheap
for cash. W. H. Kimmons, Ac-
worth, Rt. 1.
Good Mare, 1350 lbs. 9 yrs.
old, good worker, gentle, for
sale or trade for 2 H wagon or
.|any farm implements, See near
.| Shiloh Methodist Church, 4 mi.
So. Lowell. E. M. Buchanan,
More than 100 OIC pigs from|,
HORSES AND MULES _
"FOR SALE
2 good Saddle Horses, $100,
ea. Mrs. J.-E. Jarvis, Dublin,
1357M2.
2 Mules, one 9 yrs. old, other
14 yr. old, plug, for sale. M. D.
Trammell, Forest Park, Rt. 1,
Phillip Rd.
One 7 yr. old, Mare, work
anywhere, about 1,000 lbs., $50.;
1 1/2 Bagwell Wagon, good as
new, $65. Come see. No letters
answered. Docia Harris, Lula.
4 yr. old Horse, for sale
cheap. Mrs. O. H. Moore, Perry.
2 broke Mares, 6 or 7 yrs.
old, ride and plow, 2 colts, 3
yrs. old, a 5 yr. old stallion.
Georgia raised. $750. Paul 4X.
Stewart, Buena Vista, Rt..1, Box
50 A. : ;
1 Reg. Tenn. Walking horse
stallion, 6 yrs. old, straight line
Merry Boy breeding. Sell or
trade for a first class team of
farm mules. A. . Moyer,
Barnesville, or 418 State Capitol
Atlanta, Phone CY 1791.
Spotted mare, peppy, fast, wt..
about 800 Ibs. also spotted,
gentle pony, about 500 lbs. 6
yrs. old, $200.for both. Harry
Lambert, Albany, 1003 Dawson
Rd.
Extra good mare Mule, gentle
work anywhere, also nearly new
sell. separately. Might trade. E.
C. Reeves, Gainesville, Rt. 1,
als Bridge Rd. Phone 2044-
a \
3 good mules, some plows,
and plow tools, for sale. C. C.
Bender, Columbus, Reece Rd.
RABBITS AND CAVIES
FOR SALE
2 mos. old, Rabits, Chinchilla
crossed with NZW, with color
and features of Chinchilla, 5
does, $1.50 ea. Will ship, Ex-
press collect. J. H. Smith, Mo-
lena.
chilla, Flemish Giants, Steel
Grey Bucks and Does, 3 1/2
mos. old, 14.50 pr.; 1 Buck, i1
mos. old, $5.;.4 1/2 mos. old!
Buck, $3.50. Several small ones.
All guar. pure and to grow
large size. L. A. Crawley, Soc-
ial. Circle; Box 181.. ~~
3 White Rabbits, 2 does, 1
buck, all with pink eyes, One
Grey Pair (doe yr. old, buck
18 mos.), $8. or $2. ea. Raleigh
Pruitt, Lavonia, Rt. 2.
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.
es Austell, P. O. Box
Dik
* Some nice Calif. Cross Junior
Bucks and Does, 6 mos. old, $4.
ea. at my place. John David
Parker, Macon, Rt. 1.
Grown Giant and Heavy
Weight Chinchilla Does, ped.
stock, good producers, $5. ea.
Papers furnished; NZW Does,
$4, Ship anywhere Express Col-
lect. Douglas Corry, Union
Point. ;
English Angora Wool Rabbits,
Sr. Bred Does, $5. ea. Joh
Fields, Griffin, 1018 W. Poplar
St.
Keystone Giant Chins. some
nice does and bucks about
breeding age, $7.50 ea. Jones-
boro 2592. C, L. Cawthon, River-
dale.
One reg. Black Dutch Buck
with papers, one pair NZW,
Pair Checker Giants, 1 Giant
Chinchilla Buck, and several
Chin. Does. All does bred. Sell
all or any part. E. B. Gundberg,
Red Oak, P. O. Box 66.
Selected ped. NZW and Chin-
chilla Does, heavy producers,
$4. ea. Plus postage. Mrs. Otis
Mashburn, Cumming, Rt. 5. ~
Virgin Does, breeding age,
NZW and Californias, ped stock,
$5.-$8. ea. with papers; Calif.
Cross Hybrids, $4. ea. Does and
Bucks. FOB, Will breed before
shipping. Lee Duenckel, Mil-
Whitesburg, Rt. 2.
ledgeville. 750 N. Columbia.
7 ' t bo
c/o Double J. Ranch, Phone |
1 H. turner plow, $50 for lot or}
and Fairview Dr. Phone 3-4803..
Pure large size Rabbits, Chin- | _
Mr. Tom Linder
_ Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Linder:
5th of the Farmers
National Government.
honest real Americans.
of Ardmore Okla. one
yourself.
~
RABBITS AND CAVIES
FOR SALE
18. grown Rabbits, does and
bucks, Chinchillas, NZ Reds, NZ
Whites, and Black, $1.50 ea.
Entire lot cheaper. Cannot ship.
Miss Beneva Bone, Dallas, Rt. 3.
What The oe
People Think
_ December 22, 1951
Commissioner of Agriculture
Your editorials or articles on Internationalism
in the issues of Kor 28th and December
arket Bulletin, are very
timely and should be copied and re-printed in
every newspaper and magazine in this country
in order that citizens of all the 48 states could |
be informed as to just what is going on in
I hope you will be spared and can continue ~
your fight for justice until the present lot of
parasites in our Government are replaced by
directors of the Oklahoma Cotton Growers
- Assn. Like myself, my uncle was a strong
supporter of your ideals and American prin-
ciples and your courage to publicly express
We have often discussed you.
Again thanking you for keeping my name on
your mailing list, and with best regards, I am,
Yours very truly, = .
George H. Crank
(A small farmer)
SHEEP & GOATS
FOR SALE
2 yr old Toggenberg Milk
Goats, purebred, but not reg.,
freshen in March and April,
ist. kidding, $30. or $18. ea.
Not shipped at this price. Phone
Clarkston 3-7710. H. D. Guthrie,
Pine Lake, P. O. Box 82. >
3 fresh in goats, and 1 Billy,
(good breeder), for sale. Mrs.
R. L. Smith, Sr., Douglasville,
Rt. 4, Box. 242.
One good Yearling Hampshire
Ram, $50. C. J. Johnson, Com-
merce. \ d
2 grade milk goats, $15. ea.
Mrs. A. J. Rozier, Atlanta, 131
Fairburn Rd. S. W.
LIVESTOCK WANTED
HORSES & MULES:
Want 1 good work horse or
mule, wt. 1300-1400 Ibs., also
1 good 1 H wagon. J. T. Harris,
Suwanee.
Want small, gentle pony (for
small -boy to ride), cheap for
cash. Bobby Pounds, Doraville,
Rt. 1, Phone Chamblee, Ga.
2323.
CATLE:
Want to exch. 100 AAA Ni
Red. Pullets, 3 mos. old, for
good Heifer; Also Fairbanks
Morse Hammer Mill, 3 ton cap.
per hour, and 36 in. belt. for
Springer Heifer. R. S. Deen,
Alma, Rt. 1.
Midway. Texas
our
ometimes I wish I lived in your State sof
- gould help you carry on the fight for justice.
I do have a very close farmer friend living
about fifty miles from Atlanta who is responsi-
ble for my receiving your Market Bulletin,
_ which I really appreciate. \ eS
When you visited this western
years ago, you made a speech, I believe at
Oklahoma City. You were introduced by an
uncle of mine the late Mr. Walter Colbert
country several
of the founders and
LIVESTOCK WAI
Want reg. Guernsey
tween 15-18 mos. old,
bloodlines, ete. S. E
Jr., Fitzgerald, Rt. 4,
Phone 2967.
Want buy 1 purebr
Angus bull calf, not over
old, wt. 200 to 400 Ibs.
price and other cula
bert Collins, Whigham.
HORSES & MULES:
Want to exchange
ing mule for good c
horse; one that will ride. 4
vise: Mrs. L. J. Cox, Du
Rt. 2, Box 136. res
POULTRY FOR 8.
BANTAMS: :
Several Buff Cochin
Roosters, last years ha
sale or exch. for Banta
lets, any breed. Need
for hatching pheas
Phone Stockbridge 3
Zack Henry, Ellenwoo
Box, 4. :
10 Golden Sebright
just beginning to
blooded, $1. ea. Mrs, Lee
man, Macon, 2568 M
Ave. g
Golden Sebright Ba
1951 hatch, some nice
and cockerels, $5. Pri $
Jonesboro 2592. C. L. Cav
Riverdale. ;
5 Bantam Hens and Pu
1 Rooster, $6.; % ; Als
one year old and last
hatch, - White Wyando
1 Rooster, Master mat
$26. Mrs. Orene Poteat,
2.
Bantams: 1 Pr. Wh
horn, $4.50; trio Dark
$6.; Old English Gi
$1.50; Trio Barred Ro
All purebred and
winning stocks, Cl
LaFayette, 111
Wednesday, January 30, 1952
MARKET BULLETIN
PAGE SEVEN
OUR GREATEST NATIONAL PERILS
A Radio Address Delivered
on December 15, 1951 By The
Hon. John T. Wood,
M. C. First District Of Idaho
- :
The great menaces to our continued ex-
istence as a Constitutional Republic are
striking at the very roois of our national well-
being, and so far have met with an ominous
_ measure of success.
They are, first, our adherence to the
United Nations; second, our present policy of
following the British Fabian Socialist line,
which has recently brought about the near
destruction of the British Empire, and is now
equally threatening our own national integri-
All readers and students of the Charter
of the United Nations will grant that it pre~
supposed, and was built upon the thesis that
the Big Five, and other nations which should
Jater sign the Pact, should retain their indi-
vidual sovereignty as free and independent
mations, within the terms of the Charter,
merely combining their efforts and; under
ceriain conditions, their armaments, in a joint
effort to preserve the Peace of the World.
__ There was no indication in the terms of
the Charter that we should be set up as an
international Messiah, to be bled whiie
financially in an effort to bring up the stand-
ards of living in the have not nations, nor
to transplant some shadowy simulacrum of
our pattern of government and way of life to
those backward peoples, who might, or might
mot desire such a replica as a substitute for
their own way of life, which they have follow-
ed more or less blissfully for ages.
_ _ It is difficult to conceive of the Arabs in
their tents, the African necro in his hovel, the
eastern Europeans with their medieval ideas
of government, or even the British, with their
Oufworn aristocratic caste sysiem, as being
ready for our system of Republican Constitu-
tional government. There is no present in-
dication they have the slightest desire to live
under such a set-up.
For the incarnation of freedom within
the hearts and souls of men cannot be bought
and sold as are other commodities; and no
number of Marshall Plans or Point Four pro-
grams can substitute for the experiences and
strivings towards self-expression, which alone
are able to condition nations to desire freedom,
or even accept it when offered to them upon a
alg platter of gratuities, as we are boot-
lessly attempting in such ill-starred ventures,
to buy that loyalty in other nations we have
not been. able to otherwise command.
a Without such bakshish on an internation-
al scale by the United States, the United Na-
tions would collapse within six months; and
the true feeling of resentment against us for
our attempied interference with their jealous-
ly guarded nationalism would flame into ac-
tive dislike. now poorly concealed under a
cloak of servile humility of the Uriah Heep
variety. For be it remembered, Uriah Heep
resenied his enforced humility, and hated his
benefactors ihe more while servilely ac-
Cepting their favors. Men or nations, this has
always been true.
_ During the past three years, the original
concept of the United Nations as a league of
sovereign nations, organized for the preserva-
tion of world peace, has tended to be dis-
placed by that of a One World Government,
within which 60 nations we shall have but
One voie. Such a set-up if completed, would
completely do away with our present Con-~
stifutional Republican form of government in
the United States, substituting therefore our
inclusion into a hybrid and mongrelized group
of have not nations, who are slaveringly -
ravenous for the balance of the wealth amass-
ed through the strivings and savings of several
generations of industrious and frugal Ameri-
Cans, who have constituted and carried for-
ward the very special genius of the ideal we
have been very proud to call the American
way of life, which has been the envy of the
yprid.
The concept of some system of World
ernment, with the framework of the
United Nations, is becoming increasingly ap-
parent in the actions of that body. Little by
little, the powers delegated to the Federal
government by the sovereign people of the
United States are either being usurped by that
body, or granted to them by a governmental
set-up in Washington. which is either ignorant
of the fact it is granting powers to the United
Nations which the citizenry of the United
States granted to it alone; or that each and
every department of the Federal government
granting such powers is criminally recreant
to the oath each took upon assumption of
office to: support and defend the Constitu-
tion of the United States against all enemies
from without or within the United States.
The Constitution certainly never con-
templated that any of iis terms should au-
thorize the selling out of our hard-won
freedoms to a One World aggregation, which
is even now 51 percent Communist by popu-
lation, and which is aiming to completely sup-
plant our sovereign system of Constitutional
Republican government, under which we have -
lived and prospered for the past one hundred
and sixty-four years.
This One World Government, already
partly set up within the United Nations, is
even now exercising the following powers
granted to the Federal government alone by
the Constitution:
1. The sole right of Congress to declare
war, and proscute it to a speedy and
successful conclusion.
2. The sole right of Congress to establish
Post Offices. The United Nations now
has its own Post Office, free from the
supervision of the Federal govern-
ment.
3. The sole right-of Congress to levy
taxes upon all American citizens. All
employees of the United nations are
free from Federal taxation.
4. The sole right of Congress to coin
money and regulate the value thereof.
This right was abrogated to the Chief
Executive in 1933, by a Congress who
apparenily never knew they were
granting to him that which had been
delegated to them alone, as a sacred
trust, by the American people. It
was nullified a second time by the
Bretton Woods Monetary Agreements,
without- which the concept of the
United Nations could never have been
brought to birth.
5. The sole right of Congress to supervise
immigration. The United Nations may
now admit, and is admitting whomso-
ever*it pleases; and there is nothing
we can do about it.
6. The right of Congress to levy duty on
imports. All goods and material im-
ported, by the U.N. or its employees
come in duty free. :
7. The right of the Chief Executive, with
his Cabinet, by and with the consent
of Congress, to direct and regulate
foreign affairs. This right has been
more or less completely usurped by
the State Depariment, which now acts
cojointly with the United Nations, of
which it has become an integral part.
in the determination and direction
of our foreign policies.
8. The right of our soldiers to. serve in
wars solely declared by the Congress,
and only unger our own banner, the
Stars and Stripes, to be buried be-
, neath its sacred folds; and to be under
the command of none but American
officers.
9. The sole right of Congress to levy
taxes upon the American people. The
United Nations levied a tax of nineteen
billions of dollars annually upon the
peoples of Canada, the United States,
Australia, New Zealand, and the na-
tions of Western Europe this year, our
share of which was the eight and one-
half billions of dollars appropriated
by Congress in October of this year.
10. The right of the United States to re-
main Master in its own House. The
Defense Production Administration is
given the first allotment of our pro-
ducts, which is as it should be. For-
eign allocations of these goods re-
ceive the second preference, and these
are determined by our State Depari-
ment, again acting conjointly with the
United Nations. Our national economy
receives the third share, if any. This
is the real cause of our tremendous
shortages of steel, copper, tin, zinc,
rubber, and other such materials;
while, at the same time, Belgium is
shipping into this country an abun-
dance of steel from the Ruhr Valley
in Germany, and selling it at twice the
domestic price, while she is receiving
her steel from us as a gratuity.
Mr. Frank E. Holman, Past President of
the American Bag Association, with other
members of his committee, have been warning
the United States Senate, for the past three
years, against granting any more treaty righis
to the' conventions of the United Nations; and
so far, their advice has been followed; but I
am at this moment in possession of nine
volumes of such conventions already passed
by the United Nations; and which, if granted
treated rights, will completely destroy the
government of this United States, as we have
known it.
Ordinary .prudence .should dictate to
these glamorized supporters of a Communist
World State, within the United Nations, they
should at least have a cohesive, workable plan
of such a world government set-up to offer to
the loyal citizens of this country in place of
our Constitutional Republican State, which.
has succesfully operated for the past one hun-
dred and sixty-four years.
But no such design is even offered. There
are as many fuzzy ideas concerning actual
governmental technics held by these schizo-
phrenic statesmen as there are the individuals
holding them. They are indeed a far cry from
the wise, bold, and fearless founding fathers
who gaye us our Constitutional liberties.
They long for Peace WITH CHAINS:
and a security nowhere possible except within
the squalid confines of a slave barracoon; or
the grim, guarded walls of a-penitentiary. The
closing words of Patrick Henrys immortal
speech are much more sorely needed ai this
fateful time than when they were uttered: Is
life so dear, or peace so.sweet as to be pur-
chased at the price of chains and slavery."
The brand of socialism known as British
Fabian Socialism, differs from the ordinary
soap box variety, largely in its outer gar-
ments. It substitutes a planned social order
for the Socialist State. It advocates a planned
security from the cradle to the grave, while
collectivism and internationalism the Com-
munist World State are boldly presented
in our educational system through UNESCO
as the achievement of human rights for all the
peoples of the world. Dont forget, this is also
the teaching of Communism. Read the Russian
Constitution for further information. The un-
iversities and colleges of our land, with their
long-haired half-men, and their shorthaired
half-women, have taken the place of the lusty
proletariat of the.soap box, who was a thou-
sand times better American than they. He
would have spurned the idea of sinking our
Constitutional government into the morass of
a Communist One World United Nations.
New Dealism, Fair Dealism, UNESCO,
The Brain Trust all had their origin in
Communism or British Fabian Socialism. They
live, move, and breathe within its miasms.
The machinations of the Federal Power
System, with its systems of so-called Au-
thorities, governmental Controls, Subsidies
to farmers not to do something, unearned
Pension systems, Federal Subsidies to educa-
tion, Socialized medicine, a Socialized Public
Health system, and the United Nations with
its give-away programs, are all vocative evi:
dences of how far we have traveled as a na:
tion towards Socialism and Communism since
we began the sorry job of scrapping our
Constitution. mt
The time is indeed short to reverse our
present Roosevelt-Truman-Acheson brand of
politics, and get back as quickly and as
thoroughly as we can to sound, Constitutional
government,
oe
as
cet
' White
MARKET BULLETIN.
PAGE EIGH'
POULTRY FOR SALE
BUTTERCUPS:
4 April hatch purebred But-
tercup Roosters, $2. ea. Ex-
change for Guineas. Raleigh
Pruitt, Lavonia, Rt. 2.
LEGHORN:
1 yr. old White Leghorm
Cockerel, New Auburn strain,
FOB $5. Clyde Armour, Co-
lumbus, Warm Springs, Rd., Rt.
3. 2
2 Roselawn No. 1 mating
Leghorn Cockerels, 6
mos. old, direct 300-327 egg
matings, eligible for breeding
certificate, $3.50 ea. FOB. W. R.
Lassiter, Atlanta, 35 Rockyford
Rd. N. E. Tel. DE 2681,
MINORCAS, ORPINGTONS:
Yellow Buff Onpington Roos-
terss $1.75 ea.; to $3. ea.; Also
Negro Roundhead, Shuffler, and
Brown Red Roundhead Game
Stags, $3. Shipped. Mrs. B. H.
Holland, Dalton, Rt. 2.. *
CORNISH, AND
GIANTS:
One Snake a Rooster, 2
yrs. old, prize fighter, $5. Will
ship. Mrs. W. A. Hall, Elberton,
Box 213.
Pit Games, 2 hens, 1 cock,
$0. per head. C. H. Baldwin,
Atlanta, Rt. 5, Box 589.
One extra good pen claret-
hatch Games, consisting of 3
Speckled Hens, 1. White Hen, 3
Brown Red Pullets, and a good
Red Stag, 11 mos. old, $50.
Trade for milk goats. R.- R.
White, St. Elmo, Tenn., Rt. 3.
(Walker Co. Ga.).
Purebred White Cornish
Roosters from prize winning
stock, tested, $2.50 ea. Mrs. W.
H. Walters, Lavonia, Rt. 2.
_ 3 Game Stags, Jimmie John-
son Roundhead-Gussette Shawl,
One pure Warhorse, 5-5 1/2 ibs.
ready to walk, $2.50 ea. J. B.
Johnson, Knoxville.
Brown Red Pit Game Cocks
and Hens, guar. purebred for
sale. Letters ans. Sam Pelfrey,
Dalton, Rt. 1.
Games: 2 Pit Game Stags, 51
hatch, Round Head and Gray,
$15. ea. DE. 3067. W. C. Shu-
mate Jr., Stone Mountain, Rt. 1.
PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS,
PIGEONS, QUAIL, DOVES,
ETC::
2 pairs, 3 yr. old Blue Pea-
fowls, $50. Pr. Mrs. Britt O-
Neal, Dry Branch.
Fine healthy Bob White Qual
for breeding or restocking, Jan.
and Feb. delivery, $5. Pr. Live
delivery guaranteed. W. H.
Reeves, Savannah, Rt. 4, Tel.
4-5057. s
Ringneck Pheasants, $3. e@a.;
Bob White Quail, $4. Pr. Ship-
ped by express. C. C. Pollard,
Augusta, Sand Bar Ferry Rd.
Large Northern Quail; $5. pr.
FOB. Live delivery and saiis.
guaranteed. Wilbur E. Duifi
Jr., Atlanta, 2085 McKinley
N. W. AT 2511.
Golden Pheasants, 51 hatch,
$10. pr.; Ringnecks, $7. pr. Can
ship anywhere; Also want Gold-
en Ringneck, Reeves-Ringneck
and other crosses. D. Kennedy,
Quitman, Rt. 2.
Cihinese Ringneck Pheasants,
$8. trio. All birds in good health
and full plumage. W. C. Tate,
Gainesville, (Near Lyman Hall
School).
4 Ringneck Pheasants, 1-cock,
3 hens, 1951 hatch, $3.50 ea.;
$14. lot. W. H. Sheridan, De-
eatur, 214 Madison Ave.
REDS (RH, RI, OTHERS):
8 fine Hampshire Hens,
rown, laying, and 1 rooster,
(no kin), $2.25 ea. Come after.
eae C. R. Sorrells, Monroe, Rt.
NH Reds, 12 ready to lay
pullets, 1 male,, 5 mos. old, 4)
A selected, $18. Bring crate and
notify day or two in advance.
Or will ship. Mrg. T. T. Me-
Nelley, Turnersville.
5-4A grade NM Red Pullets,
ust eng to lay, 1 Rooster
or sale. shipped, buyer
urnigh coop. Luther Poole, Toc-
goa, Rt. 1, x 128,
2% NH of" tess 5 mos. old,
A ie, $2. ; $1.75 ea. for
t, 3. Paull, Ocilla, Rt. 1,
+ 228..
| East 40th. St.
2| tact: Mrs. J. P. Lynn, Collins.
POULTRY FOR SALE
TURKEYS, GUINEAS, DUCKS
Extra fine USDA Beltsville
White Turkeys, for breeding
purposes, 1 tom, 2 hens, 6-3
Ibs. each, approx, 14 wks. shiv-
ped. More than one trio if desir-
ed. Contact: Zack Cravey,
Chamblee, 4256 Braircliff. Tel.
EV. 4042.
One young M. B. Turkey Tom
April 1951 hatch, nice for breed-
ing, $15., of 50c per Ib. No
checks. Mrs. Omie E. Faircloth,
Pulaski.
Bronze Turkey Hen, 2 yrs.
old, this spring 19 lbs., $9. Mrs.
J. E. Hutcheson, Austell, Wash-
ington St., Rt. 1.
3 Turkey Toms, 18-20 lbs.
ea., 50c Ib. FOB. Mrs. G. Col-
lins, Cobbtown, Rt. 2 -
8 Ducks, 2 Drakes, large type
(1 duck setting on 18 eggs), $1.
ea. Wiley Y. Haryer, Wray.
~ Bronze B. B. Turkeys, 50c
lb.; Large fat friers, $1. ea. 12
mi. E. Montezuma on Hwy. 26.
Five miles W. Henderson. 390
ft South. Sign on power pole.
Chas. L. Collison, Montezuma,
BED ee
2 B. B. Bronze Turkey Hens,
1 Tom, all purebred, $25. Or
sell separately. Excellent for
breeding purposes. Phone 343-
R2. zo J. Harvage, Valdosta,
Rt. 3. 2
2 Ducks, 1 Drake, $2.50 Plus
express. Ans. letters. Leonard
Goodson, LaFayette, Rt. 3. .
8 White Guineas, 1 yr. old,
nice, fat, $2. ea.; Young trio
White Pheasants, in full feather,
$10. trio. Extra nice 1951 hatch.
dele Barr, Lumpkin, Po. O. Box
38.
POULTRY WANTED
DUCKS:
Want trio Indian Runner
Ducks. Must be reasonable.
John Barrett, Savannah, 2234
GAMES:
Want purebred Pit Game or
other pure Games, letters ans.
J. H. Rush, Columbus, 2326
Lumpkin Rd,
GEESE:
Want 1 white gander. Advise
price, ete. P. B. Haynie, Bolton.
MISCELLANEOUS
CHICKENS:
Want any number (care for
up to 600) Chicks on halves.
Party furnish chicks and feed,
I the equipment. Experienced.
L. R. Steed, Talbotton.
FARM HELP WANTED
Want farmer to raise 4.6
Acres tobacco on halves. Con-
Want elderly man and wife|
able to work a good size 1 H
farm. Can help in crop some if
needed. Can move party also.
No drunks. G. Belvin Small-
wood, Williamson, Rt. 1.
Want man to help milk and
help with other dairy work.
Must be sober and reliabie.
House empty. Can move any-
time. Contact: --U,sL5,-Smith,;
Mansfield,
Want at once, unencumbered
white woman to live as one of
family and do light farm work
on farm, for room, board and
salary. Mrs. W. W. Edenfield,
Stillmore, Rt.
Want young reliable, white
woman to live in home and help |
with light farm work on small
farm, $40. mo., and board. Write:
Mrs. L. O. Lusk, Decatur, Rt.
3, Phone Clarkston 43-6623.
Want sober, married man to
|live on farm and take care of
chickens, etc. State experience,
age, etc. R. M. Van Leer, Gaines-
ville, P. O. Box 577.
Want woman for light farm!
work on farm (no milking): No)
children. Pay by week. Mrs. |
Luther Garner, Alvaton.,
Want colored man with small
family to work in Orehard and |
pasture work. $3. day wages.
Hill Fruit Farm,
|E. F. Clanton, Fairburn, Rt.
Hamilton L. Hill, Newnan. Rae
FARM HELP WANTED
Ay,
Want dependable, honest,
middleaged white woman, to
live in modern home and _ heip
with light farm chores on small
farm. Room, board and reason-
able salary. Write: D. K.
Christie, Dawson, RFD.
Want good reliable, hard
working man for good 1 H. farm}
and a 25-30 acre fishing lake
fadjoining farm, 4 mi. Fayette-
ville, Fayette County (not very
far trom Atlanta). Good 6 R
house with electricity. For full
particulars, contact. Ben T.
Huiet, Atlanta, 615 State Office
Bldg. WA 8764, or home peau,
MA 2772.
Want young or middle aged
man to work on diary farm.
Good salary to begin with and
chances-for promotion for right
party. Phone 325 R2. Millen,
Ga. J. B. Gay, Garfield.
Want at once: 2 farmers for
2 H farm each, to be operated
with mules and tractor, or i
farmer in position to handle 4-
H farm on halves. Corn, Pea-
nuts, Tobacco, Cotton. Must act
quickly. Urgent: C. L. Thomp-
son, Thomasville, POB 295, >
Want experienced farmer to
work 4 acres tobacco, other
small crops if desired. Must
furnish self until tobacco curing
time. 5 R house with elect,
good barn, car shelter, good
well water. School and- mail
route. Can milk 1 or more
cows. I. H. Anderson, Alma, Rt.
Want farmer for 4.7 acres
Tobacco, and 4300 second year
turpentine faces, also crop Jdarnd
(either one: or both) on 50-50
basis. House furnished, mail
and school route. No drunks.
Mrs. E. B. Anderson, Baxley,
Ris 2.
Want families for 2 and 1 H
crops, good land and_ stock,
land produces bale cotton to
acre. School bus line near
churches. 50-50. basis. Fulton
County, north of Roswell. Write
or come see. Tel: CH 8274. S. T.
Spruill, Dunwoody, Rt. 1. 2
Want healthy Christian wo-
man to live with aged couple
and do light farm chores on
farm for room, board, salary.
Home has running water and
elec. lights. Geo. R. Hunt, Sah
leen.
Want single man with good
references to work 1 H farm
on halves. 1 room over garage,
elec. light and furnished; w1il-
ing furnish meals in exchange
for some extra work. W. H.
McWilliams, Lithonia, Rt. 3.
Want good colored family to
raise feed for cows and hogs,
in 1952. Tractors to work with.
Good house, lights, plenty wood,
good well of water. Weekly or
monthly salary; share crop for
1953 if desired and satisfactory.
G. B. Perry, Cochran, Rt. 3.
Want 1 or 2 H farmer. Good
land and houses on mail and
school Rt. No drunks or road-
goers need apply. ee Robevt-
son, Temple.
Want man with family and
own stock and tools or tractor,
able furnish self for farming.
I furnish 4 R house, lots good
rich land, elec. water, wood.
Prefer man interested in truc'x
andy cattle farming. On schocl
bus and mail Rt. 1 1/2 mi. town.
Sam A. Murphy, Douglasvilie,
Rt. 2, Box 362 A.
|
Want farm family for 1952
on 3rds. and 4ths. basis, and
raise broilers. Must be sober,
honest, with good referenves.
Must furnish self. No drunks.
Mrs. S. B. Shields, Cohutta, Rt.
1. (Cohutto-Riverdale Rd.).
Want settled couple, white or
col., for good farm, 25 mi. No.
Atlanta, on paved mail and
school bus rt. Fuel, wcod, good+
water and pasture. Contact for
particulars. C. K. Bane es
Marietta. Rt. 1, Box 150.
Want clean, healthy, middle
age woman to live with me
the year round and do light
fram chores on farm for room,
board, and salary. 2 in family.
Good home for right party. Mrs.
4d.
Want 2 large colored families,
some with tractor exp., to work
on farm; day labor. W. S. Lof-
ae HELP WANTED |
Want 1 or 2 H ee oi
6 R house, near church, lights, |
school bus and mail route.
Furnish if desired. Call 3356, or
Walker, McDonough.
Want middle aged tavhiieue No
children. Must be exp., in pas-
ax
Phone or write. E. J. Wilson,
Decatur, Rt..2, Phone DE 7122.
Want unencumbered, reliable,
smart woman, preferably white,
for light farm chores on farin,
for good home and salary.. Mrs.
Jewell D. Watkins, Fitjay, Rt.
ie
ce
Want unencumbered, riddle
aged; white woman for light
farm work on farm, for 3 aged
christian people. Contact for
particulars. Mrs. E. Texas Goose-
man, Ray City, Rt.-1.
POSITIONS WANTED
Man, 45 yrs. old, does not
drink, wants job looking after
farm for some good man. 1
6 R house, and have to be
moved. Prefer around . Griffin
or McDonough. James P. John-
son, Morrow, Rt. 1.
2 white,
want jobs on farm for wages;
one tractor driver, the other
with mules. Need 4 R. house,
lights, wood. Have to be
moved; ready move any time.
W. T. Johnson, Hampton, Rt.
2 ke
Want job on farm. Can op-
erate any kind of machinery,
like raise chickens, hogs, cat-.
tle (any kind): Like-have 2 R
house with lights, alone. 42
yrs. old, single; do not. drink.
Answer at once, stating salary
and other particulars. ees
Hawkins, Atlanta, Rt. 9,~ 323.
St. John Ave., S. W. (At back
of Lakewood Pk.)
47 yr. old man wants job
as farm overseer (cattle). Ret-
erences furnished. C. L. Peavy,
Albany, 206 McKenie Circle.
White woman (husband de-
ceased) with 3 children (ages
6, 10, 16) wants work on farm.
Selt and boy to work. Retfer-
ences if needed. Live on-Alamo
and Lumber City Hwy., 5 mi.
Alamo. Mrs. Viola Brown,
Glenwood, Rt. 1._
so. raise chickens on shares. Ex-1}
perienced truck and: tractor
driver. Can do carpenter and
paint work. 7 in family. Prefer
on school bus route. Good
house. J. M. McDaniel, Jones-
boro, Rt. 1.
Experienced tulicto -driver
with 1951 B model J. D. wants
to plow for farmers or break
garden plots. Sober, depend-
able, courteous. Prefer work in
Hart Co. Write or see. Raes
reasonable. Spencer Strange,
Hartwell, 602 Savannah St.
Young man wants job on
farm. No experience but will-
ing to learn. Pay as I learn.
Live as one of family. Healthy,
sober. Bobbie Dease, Care
halves or standing rent. Good | :
write: J. H.:Harper, or . wey
good hand to work. Need 5 aris
middleaged men}
Want crop with. tractor, al-
S. Moss, Flovilla, Rt. 1.
ers to help
| hog. and ch ken
ture planting, fencing and the | hor S
operation of Ford tractor. Com- | !
fortable living quarters, or will | onc
contract job. Must furnish ref.| :
on farm as superin
miliar with farm |
tractors, etc. Cons
dairy farm. Availab!
Roy pendetes, EL
V5 Tas Horst
Boulevard S._
farm, raising chick
factory basis, ee)
have house room.
repair and carpe
Allen Hight, Rom
Mrs. Mae Cox.
World War II v.
old, in good heal
yr. old son, wan
after large stock
poultry. Can
work, keep up ma chi
tor and truck
combine and other
ment; handle stoc
Best of Ref. Lett
Hodges, a Po
epptea Pn 5 Ces
Can operate
ers. Will start
State salary.
halter, Care Mr.
Coosa, Rite
work extra
House with elec
/moved. E. A.
Risk a
Young sin
on farm._
farm. ee
references. Bor
or looking after
Fulton Co. Goo
lights. John M
434 cana - Ave.,
er wants itd
Have to be mov
Smith, Silver |
The Georgia aes Breeders Rene
a Georgia Duroc Show and Sale at the Lo
Livestock Auditorium at Valdosta, Ga.,
uary 29th, 1952. All interested parties are ere
vited to attend this show and sale. 5
Herefords, 24 females and 16
ary 13, at Union Stock
For catalog. ite Ralp
{3 Atlanta 45 Mangum: Bt S.
REGISTERED HEREFORD AUCT
Ga. Hereford Assn., will hold an aucti
type. Cows with calves at side, | )
and service age bulls, in Albany, G:
Yards.
side Drive, N. E. At i
z
bulls Hor i