Editorial By TOM LINDER * President Eisenhower and Secretary of Agriculture Benson are undertaking to force through Congress a new policy _ for American agriculture, The history of good times and bad times, prosperity and depression, low prices and high prices, and the general welfare of this country have depended _ upon whether or not the farmers were _ prosperous or whether they were in fi- nancial. distress. _. This being true, what is said here is _ of just as great importance to bankers, business and professional men, to indus- trial workers, white) collar workers and _ federal and state employees as it is to _ the farmers: themselves. _ FLEXIBLE PRICE SUPPORTS Me. Eisenhower and Mr. Benson ad- vocate what they refek to as flexible price supports on certain farm products. Ac- tually the term flexible as used by these distinguished gentlemen is misleading. _ Present. price supports are flexible. i This is true because price supports on basic crops are now ninety percent of _ parity. We must remember that parity itself is flexible because parity is fixed _ by the prices of industrial products which the farmer buys. When these industrial, products rise in price, the parity rises with them. When these industrial prod- ucts go down in price, parity goes down with them. The ninety percent price ~ support of course means ninety percent of the prices of these industrial products and is flexible and changing at all times. _ Each month the Secretary of Agriculture issues a notice stating what parity is on _ each of the farm crops for that particular month. All of these things being true, it naturally follows that when Mr. Eisen- hower and Mr. Benson advocate a flexi- ble support price, they are hiding some- thing behind the word flexible. What _ they are advocating is not a flexible price Support. What they are asking is that ~ officials in Washington be given arbi- trary power to raise or lower price sup- ports at will. This amounts to a Totali- tarian idea of economic control, WHITHER GOEST THOU Almost every day we see where some- one has been asked the question: Are you a Communist or have you been a Communist? Reduced to corn field English, that question means Is your egiance to the United States or is your WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1954 Farm NUMBER 21 Policy . ture, Colleges of Agriculture, no good-American should find difficulty in answering. Every . good American should be proud to stand up and say I am an American. I believe in Americas Constitution and its flag. I am willing to fight in its defense. I hold no alle- giance to any flag of any country or any - combination of countries other than the Stars and Stripes of America. Anyone who hesitates to answer that simple question is unworthy of being called an American. By the same token, all public officials, whether executive, legislative or judicial, should be equally emphatic in word and in action that their allegiance is to the United States and that their sole interest as public officials is the welfare of the people of the United States. If Congress will apply the same rule to themselves that they apply to one suspected of being a Communist, most of our agricultural problem. will disappear. Most agricultural problems in this country stem from our foreign policy. It is impossible to have a sound foreign policy for the long pull if that. policy contravenes or destroys a prosperous American agriculture. It is likewise im- possible to have a sound agricultural policy for the long pull unless we have a sound foreign policy. For twenty years, from 1934 to 1954, the foreign policy of the State Depart- ment and the domestic policy of the De- partment of Agriculture have been in vital conflict with each other. Through the expenditure of tax pay- ers money we have developed Federal aid for the Federal Department of Agri- culture, State Departments of Agricul- Experi- ment Stations, Extension Forces and other agricultural agencies. Under the impetus of American initiative, research and mechanical invention, the .cotton fields, with their millions of happy work- ers, have produced fiber, food and feed | beyond the wildest dream of two genera- tions ago. In the Middle West, the fields of corn and the waying expanses of wheat and other grains have shone in the sum- mer sun and grain elevators, flour mil's and, feed milis have employed hundreds of thousands; local and transconinental railroads became necessary and were built for the transportation and distri- bution of the products of the farms. Cat- tle of all kind, swine, poultry, eggs and dairy products helped to give American people the highest standard of food of any people on earth. The fruit trees from Okeechobee to British Columbia and from Plymouth Rock to Long Beach fur- nished American people with a year round supply of health giving and pros- perity producing products of the orchard and grove; while the garden of America expanded into an immense commerce of fresh vegetables, melons and berries, the like of which the world had never seen. American cities and industries of all kind grew to be objects of world envy because of the fruits of the soil and because. of the robust physique, the untrammeled minds, the limitless energy and self-re- liance of the sons and daughters of the land who came to cast their lots and find their fortunes in these centers of nation- al life. Human experience has shown that it is relatively easy to build and to acquire. It is much more difficult to keep what we have acquired and to maintain what we have built, * As America prospered. and grew, great concentration of wealth in the hands of a few began to raise its ugly head. Men of greed and unbridled wealth began to cast covetous eyes across the sea, The money they invested in the continents and isles of the earth were profits. gained from American farmers, American workers, American profession- al people and American businessmen. Yet, having gained these enormous amounts of money, these greedy barons of.the money bag lost all sense of patriot- ism and came to look upon the peoples of all nations, races and tongues, as fair prey from whom to gain still more moun- tains of gold, still more miles of land, and, of course, still more power over rulers, legislative bodies, public officials, and educational systems. With their billions they have been able to prostitute men who are supposed to be scientists and have them proclaim that man himself is but a creature of evolution from lower forms of life. They have had such scientists to deny that God created different races of man. By endowments to institutions of higher learning, they have filled the minds of a generation of American college students with their false doctrines of political, social and economic fallacies. With more gold they have succeeded in leading astray a great many church men caus- ing them to desert the Holy Scripture except as a cloak for their activities in political, social and racial propaganda campaigns. All of this was done to create a fertile field in the minds of men of different races and of different nations in which to sow the seed of a world em- pire to be controlled by the money bags (Continued on page 8) fee Control Farmall Tractor, GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN| on the mailing list and for Seance ot ares to STATE BU- REAU OF MARKETS: 222 STATE CAPITOL, Atlanta, | NATIONAL = Pee gale of notice. notices. Tom Linder, Commissioner Sublished Weekly ai Atlanta, Ga, Notices. of farm produce and cas admissible under postagei regulations inserted one time om each request and repeated only when request is accompanied by mew copy Under Legislative Act the Georgia Market Bulletin does not assume any responsibility for any notice appearing-in the Bulletin, nor for any transaction resulting from published Limited space vill not permit insertion of notices contain- ing more than 35-40 words, not t including name and address. 114-122 Pace St., Covington, Gs By Department ot Agriculturc Notify on FORM 3578--Bureau o Markets, 222 State Capito] of June 6, of October 8, i917. Entered as second class matte) August 1, 1937 at the Post Office at Covington, Georgia under Act 1900. Accepted for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Seetion 1103 Act State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga. Publication Office Executive Office State Capito! _ Editorial and Executive Offices 114-122 Pace St. Covington, a SECOND HAND MACHINERY FOR SALE SECOND HAND MACHINERY FOR SALE One David Bradley Garden Tractor with mowing attach- ment, for sale. Aubrey Stallings, Carrollton, c/o El-Mar Farm. 2 Row Planters, Distributors, Cultivators that an be used on an H Farmall or an M Traetor, all good- cond., $150. at my place. H. E. Rutherford, Union Point, Box 148. 1 H Hay Rake, 2 H Iron Hay Cutter, both need repair,, for sale.-T. H. Carter, Atlanta, 35 Weyman Ave., S. W. Al. 5040. Late make J. D. Model B Tractor, cultivator, 2 disc til- ler, Taylorway harrow, bush and bog, reasonable. Letters ans. Ted Bishop, Ellenwood, Rt. 1. Di. 8010. ~ + 1952 Super C Farmall, prac- tically good as new, 8 disc King harrow, 7 ft. mower, bargain. A. B. Wiley, Carnesville, Rt. 3, Ford Tractor, bought last year, 2) row, all equipment, planters, cultivators, distribu- tors, harrow, tiller, drag pan, side dredsez, pulley, Turner pianut picker, with belts C. H. Phillips, Fitzgerald, Box 268. Tel 2859. 1953 Model Super A Touch cul- tivator, fertilizer, cotton and corn planter, 16 in. bottom plow, dbl. sec. harrow, all bought new 1953. A-1 cond. ae John Powell, Register, Rt. A-C Model C Tractor with cultivator, fair cond., $495.; A-C 60 Combine with motor, good cond., $1045.; Harvey Racine 8 in. Hammer Mill with 3 screens, practically new, $125. R. B. Eve, Keysville, Rt. 1. Farmall H, 1952, mechanically perfect, used approx. 100 hrs. for anhydrous application, no attachments. Will finance, part or will accept good Ford bot- tom plow and/or rotary mow- er as part payment. L. L. Heidt, Cordele, Box 49. Adlis-Chalmers Side _ Del. Rake, PTO driven (forward and reverse), 2 speed, used 2 sea- sons, good cond., $225. John C. Reid, Zebulon. Phone 85J11 af- ter 4 P.M. John Deere Tractor M com- plete with cultivators and planters, 10 disc Killifer Earth- master plow; bought 1951 (run about 400 hrs.) $1200. Letters ans. William: Morres, Macon, Rt. 7, Bloomfield Dr. New Allis-Chalmers Com- bine 60 with en@ine, grain bin, and unloading spout, used on only about 59 acres. S. J. Clay, Macon, Rt. 3. Phone 2-5117. Rototiller Garden Tractor with attachments, new, used only 3 hrs., sell at big dis- count as too small for my use. W. F. Manus, Norcross, Holcomb Bridge Rd. Phone 3319. Two 12 x 38, Two 600 x 16 Tractor Tires for M Farmall Tractor, $75. for lot. Carlton Goldin, Draketown, Bush and bog harrow, used one season, good cond., $100. AS wae Durden, Fayetteville, Rt. 3. Phone 3184. Sacrifice: 1953 Case Tractor, Model VAC, hardly used, like new, with harrow, disc plow, cultivator, buster and carriage. Write. Johnny Lang, Plognune: dale, P. O. Box 10. John Deere Tractor H, plant- ers, cultivators, 4 good tires, fair running shape, $600. for lot. L. M. McWhorter, Pitts, Rt, 2: Mule drawn stalk cutter, Oliver walking cultivator, John Deere Mowing Machine, Led- better Planter, 2 H wagon, 53 | Super C tractor planters, fer- tilizer, cultivators, smoothing harrow, used very little. J. R. Clark, Kennesaw, Rt. 2, Moon Station. JD Two Row Tractor, starter, lights, power take-off pulley, | cultivators, planters, fertilizer attach., dbl. sec. dise harrow, 4 disc tiller, used 3 yrs., bought new, $1500. Located at Mrs. M. Cagler Powells farm, 7 mi. No. Fitzgerald on old Abbeville Rd. E. F. Boyd, Sr., Adel. One 4 can milk cooler, 2 single unit milking machines with compressor and motor, other equipment for dairy, all Ist. class cond. V. Owen, Armuchee, Rt. 2 Brooder (electric), good shape, bargain price. No letters ans. without stamps. Henry Ballew, Chatsworth, Rt. 2. Incubators, each 400 egg cap., one Humidaire,. other Farm Master, both used but in good working condition. J. L. Tade, Macon, 2395 New Clinton Rd. Allis-Chalmers Tractor with mowing machine, tiller, bush and bo harrow, good cond., oe Go. E. Douglasville, 14 in. dbl. bottom plow on rubber, good as new, $125. Phone Marietta 82970 after 6 P. M., or write. G. S./ Brown, Powder Springs, Rt. 1. One Well Chain, 47 ft. solid links, regular size (for well) $4. FOB. P. J. Sewell, Lavonia. |ing land, power lift, SECON Oo HAND MACHINERY FOR SALE SECOND HAN: MACHINERY FOR SALE Oues: Intl. No. 8 Moldboard Plow, trailer type, on. rubber, swith 2 16 in. bottoms, good cond. no junk, $160. at my farm, 15 miles South Blakely, Hwy. 27. Collie C. Mididleton,. Blakely, P. O. Box 286; Cub Tractor; good cond., fully equipped, with disc for -break- harrow;. duplex planter, guano. distri- butor, gan plows, pulley, pur- chased new Feb. ree used very little, $1350. M. Gools- by, Brunswick, 2000 Reynolds St. ; : 2% HP Bready New Model AR Garden Tractor with re- verse, cultivator, disc harrow, plow with coulter, 32 in. field mower, 42 in. bulldozer blade, spike harrow, power driven mower, used 1 season. W. R. Beck, Jr, Sandy Springs, 145 Mt. Vernon Hwy. Tel. Atlanta, Ch. 8883. One 2 H Wagon, and Fordson Tractor, cheap. Mrs, R. Whelchel, Dawsonville, Rt. 3. A-6 Case Combine (spike cylinder), 1951 model with V-4 motor, and peanut attach., all ood cond.,.$750.; D. A. Law, hula, Tel. 1030-R-2 Tifton. 2 unit DeLaval Magnetic as latest model, for -dairy, 3 James Moore, Toccoa, Rt. Nee Holland Pick Up Baler, good working cond. $1000. cash. See at Burnard Smiths Cattle Farm. 4 mi. So. Monroe just west of Social Circle Rd. R. L..| Jackson, Jonesboro. 500 lb. Fairbanks Morse Plat- form Scales, to weigh feed and hay, $20. 3 mi. out Rivertown Rd. Earl Stephens, Fairburn, Rt. 2, Rivertown Rd. ; Good 2.H Mowin good 2 H Wagon or sale or exch. for 300 lbs. reseeding Crimson Clover and 300 lb. Ky. 31 Feseue Seed. Letters ans. W. S. Mitchell, Cairo, RFD 2. Speedex Garden Tractor, 6 HP, cultivators, 16 disc tan- dem harrow, turn plow, middle Machine, buster, 1950 model, $235.; 1953 Super M Farmall Tractor, $2000.; Athens harrow, ball bearing, 10 dise, $150.; Also want Farmall Cub with culti- vators. C. C. McGee, Winder, Rt. J One 1952 B Allis-Chalmers Tractor, cultivator, planter, disc: harrow, 2 dise turing plow, used very little, (planter never used) $1350. -Otis Ruff, Rock- mart, Rt. 3. Phone 5347. One Intl. 52 Combine with motor, good cond. - N. W. Robinson. Louisvill Ds 9 Tractor with Bycrus Erie Bull Dozers, -good shape, 2 yrs. old, for reasonable offer. || - See at my farm 10 mi, Rd. Jack Clason, 1115 Broadway. Macon Columbus, 750 cap. Elee. Brooder, $60. || BD. L. Stokely, Powder Springs, Rt. 2: Ve. mi. No. Wathia Springs). Bench Wood Saw with belt, in good cond., $40. Raymond CG: Porch, Macon, Springdale Dr. Phone 55859. One B Allis-Chalmers Trac- tor, bush and bog harrow, $365. at farm; Farmall, fully equip- ped, 2 dise plow, cultivators, planters, $650. R. Maddox, Winder, RFD 4. : One 1953 Super C Farmall Tractor, with fertilizer and planting equip., cultivated and planted 40 acres wlast year, practically new. Liberal dis- count. J. C. Brodnax, Walnut Grove, Box 5. Sears Incubator, around 85 or 90. egg cap., $10. Will not ship.-C.'S: Winn, Dunwoordy. Tel, 47-2617. John Deere B Tractor, new motor, power-trol, planters, cul- tivators, dbl. sec. dise harrow, new J. D. 16 in. bottom plows, oh cash, or if terms, $1350. W.R. Rodgers, Doerun, Box 235. John Deere B Tractor, start- er, lights, hydraulic lift, good shape, J. D. 4 disc tiller, smoothing harrow, J. D. 8 row duster, army wagon, pea hul- ler (power). C. L. Bennett, Jef- | Ford or Ferguson Tractor, size ford Ave., NE. Cr. 3023. | most farm crops. Label this machine sO ferson, Rt. 3. CGhaniets 34 Cylinder Peaaber : Peanut Sheller with power unit, consisting of cleaner sheller, picking table, line is belts, Clark: Wise, Edison. Cialifwatore fer Allis:Cimg. | | mers WD Tractor, heavy duty type, used I season only, like new, for sale. Consider Athens | ar Dise: Plow as: part mony Ht | E. C: Wood, SECOND HAND MACHINERY WANTED: Mrs. Want to trade Bottom Plow, pulgus. G _ Allis-Chalmers, for Disc Plow to fit same. Clifford Jones, Winder, RFD 4. | Want a hammer mill to be] used with tractor, not too large, in good cond., reasonable price. ae Kinkead, Griffin, ve $8. M. P. rae 2303, Thornless B 1 in. long, large $1.25 doz.; Home berry, 2 ft., 3-4 ee Purple Want Mole Board Plow for E. Granger, Reid a M. L. Blackstock, Resaca, Seen las Gah: Want one 30 ft. baled hay and. grain elevator. Write. State price. S. P. Harris, none | Heavy bearing, 1019 Avenue A. : | berry. plants, $1 Mrs. Jacob B Want good used medium size Fa New Holland Corn Husker and : Sheller. No junk. C. D. Hood, Edison. Want Allis-Chalmers G Trac- tor with or without imple- ments, at reasonable price. John V. Arrendale, Tiger. Want good tractor (not gar- den) with plow, cultivator, and | harrow. Reasonable price. | ( Nearby (15-20 mi. Atlanta), A Sanders, Atlanta, 342 Clif- Want to exchange John|- Deere 4 Disc tiller trailway for| White 2 disc plow to fit a Farmall C, or will pay cash for same. L. : A. Barron, Cochran, Rt. 2. Want 2nd. hand Graham Hoeme Plow with 5 teeth. State price. C. W. McNair, Stapleton. be. Bene $2. Want used forage harvester | Bass, ey with motor, preferably with | 174. mower. and row crop heads. Merle H. Ensz, Stapleton, Rt. 2. Want Pickup Hay Baler and Side Delivery Rake. State con- dition and price. Letters ans. Roy Chambers, Lula, Star Bh : : Want to exchange my. rear tractor wheels with tires (size |_ 11x25x24) for iron wheels. Make Olid Model 10-20 McCor- mick-Deering. Come after my wheels, and bring exchange. G. B. Smallwood, ea Rt. ab Most weed and brush killers are 2, 4-D The 2,4-D is used mostly as a weed killer fo1 as wild mustard, ragweed, morning glory. bind weed, thistle, dandelion and plantai is used mostly to kill small trees and bushes along or in right-of-ways. Both materia if applied to susceptible growing plants. EV QUANITIES IN WIND DRIFT ae B TO KILL COTTON. 2a Use extreme care in qaug these" mate not properly handled they will not only kil c brush but also valuable farm crops. Make aj on i still day and at a time when the weeds and growing rapidly. In general, it should the rate of 1 to 2 a of the 65. SS per: package. ae use = this unas for other ee gamer - a small amount left in the tank will kill get mixed with your other spray equipment. have only one spray machine, -get another, to use 2,4-D. Do not use the container that the 2,4-D but destroy it when it is emptied by heating a way as to prevent the remaining vapors fro in contact with vegetation. Avoid inhaling with vegetation. Avoid heres. or cont skin, eyes or Clove epee MARKET BULLETIN PAGE THREE D Ss. ios doz. Hazienut Bush- '5e doz.; Red Plum Sprouts, $1.;5Yellow Roots, washed, 4 Ib. lard box full, $1. dd postage. Mrs. Nancy Hen- son, Ellijay, Rt. 3, Box 49. emore Strawberry, $1. 10, $4.50; $9. M; Mastodon, 500; $3.; $5. M; Klondike, 500, $2.75; $4.75 M; \Mtn. luckleberry, bearing size, 75c oz.; Catnip, 25c bunch; Pep- t; 25 doz.; Scuppernong mgs, 50c doz. Add postage. Lee Hood, Gainesville, Rt. tn. Huckleberry, 2 doz., 75c; arge Klondike Strawberry, 75c ; Imp. Dewberry, Blackberry, earing size, 50c doz.; Musca- ' dine vines, 4 ft., 45c ea.; Also idian Peach Seed, 50c doz.; on Seed, $1. lb. Add postage. osie Crowe, Cumming, Rt. 1. Frostproof Chas. Wakefield ind Early Jersey Cabbage, 500, 51.50; $2.50 M. Del Full count and prompt shipment. E. C. idrip, Flowery Branch,- Rt. 1. as. W., Jersey W. Cabbage Jants, 500, $1.25: $2. M; 5000 more, $1.50 M. Prompt del. d oe J. P. Mullis, Bax- Rt. 4. . Blakemore Strawberry, 1. C: $4.50; $8. M. PP in Ga. vy ground grown. W. M. Phil- s, Varnell, Rt. 1. Charleston Wakefield and All ason. Frostproof Cabbage,also ; -Bermuda onion Plants,300, ; 500, $1.50; $2.50 M. Del. p. Premier Strawberry, certified, tops, $4.00 C; 500, $16.65; $29.00 M. No less 100 sold, Add postage. Mrs. R. F. Terrell, Greenville. Martha Washington Aspara- gus, $1.50 doz.; Everbearing Strawberry, Mastodon, $1.00 C; erfection, $2.00 C; Also Con- cord Grape, 3, $1.00; 10, $2.50 _ Plus postage. A. P. Friday, Rome, RFD 5. _ Klondike and Mastodon Strawberry, $1.25 C; Old Time Jack Raspberry, Tame Dew- _ berry, 2, $1.00; Muscadine Vines, 3c ea.; Black Walnut Sprouts, ea. Add postage. Ezra Caine, ming, Rt. 5. Horseradish, $1.00 doz.; Black _Thornless Red Raspberry, $1.50; doz.; Gooseberry, Plums, $2.() doz.; Cherry Pepper Seed, 10c ; Martin Gourd Seed, 20c sack. All plants rooted, large, amp packed. Add postage. Mrs. H. A. Chastain, Ellijay, Rt. 5. _ Horseradish, $1.00 doz.; Black and Thornless Red Respberry, $1.50 doz.; Gooseberry Plum $2 z.; Cherry Pepper Seed, 10 pod; Martin Gourd Seed, 20c pack. All plants rooted, damp packed. Add postage. Mrs. W. W. _Louman, Ellijay, Rt. 5. _ Early Jersey Wakefield, and Golden Acre Frostproof Cab- bage, also White Bermuda Onion Plants, 300, $1.00; 500. $1.50; $2. _50 M. Prepaid. R. Chanclor, Pitts. Kudzu Crowns, $400 C; $10 _M. Mrs. T. A. Hipp, Hogansville. Latham Red Raspberry, root- State insp., $1.25 doz.; 5 doz. more, $1.00 doz. Damp packed P to any point in Ga. Roy M. Brown, Stone Mountain, Rt. 2, ilverhill Rd. Jersey and Chas. Cabbage, ee Sweet Flat Bermuda as Plants, 500, $1.25; $2.00 M del; | 000 Onion, $7.00 exp. col- lect. I. L; Stokes, Fitzgerald. J. W. and leading var,, cab- age plants, now ready, $2.00 M. Good plants and good count, Satisfaction. Clifford Smith, axley. Rt. 4. if = SEED AND GRAIN - FOR SALE 0 Yo Pepper Seed, 10c thim- eful and self addressed stamp- envelope. Mrs. J. D. Bennett, lonega, Rt. 2, loney Drip Cane Seed, hand cted in field, 30c ib. PP; Also Sugar Crowder Peas, and selected in field, for Tucker, Harlem, SEED AND GRAIN FOR SALE SEED AND GRAIN FOR SALE ~ BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE ICORN AND SEED CORN FOR SALE - Calhoun Barley, combine run, extra clean, $1.65; Martins com- bine milo, recleaned, $6.20 Cwt.; Victor Grain Oats, 90 pct. germ., $1.15; Kobe Lespedeza, 28c. Both fecleaned. FOB farm. W. M. Nixon, Thomaston, % B&B Ranch. Tel 2412. Green Okra, 35c cup. Add postage. Mrs. H. C. Bagby, Mar- ietta, Rt. 1. Tender Old Fashion Cutshort Cornfield, and White Half Run- ner Garden Bean Seed, 60c cup. Add postage. No chks. nor stamps. Mrs. Andrew Wilson, Carters, Rt. 1. 15 bu. Beat The Bee Syrup Cane Seed, 1953 crop, cleaned, matured, $10.00-bu.; 25c in small lots. FOB Austell. Hugh Morris, Clarkdale, Box 61. Red Hot Pepper in pod, 50c qt.; English Pea and Purple Hull Crowder, 50c cup; Icebox Water- melon, 12, 25c. Add postage. Mrs. Samuel Caine, Cumming. Pigeon Feed, Grain, mixed, $7 C; Health Grit, $3.25 C. FOB. George W. West, Jr., Atlanta, Rt. 6, % Westwood Farm. Tobacco Seed, cleaned, tested. 2 lead. var., Chambers Special No. 402, $1.00 0z.; $10.00 Ib.; 3 IDS. = $25.00; = 8 vb, $95.00: PP, Earl Stuckey, Blackshear. Pint Turnip or finest Canta- loupe Seed, $1.00; Elberta Peach, 35c doz:;. Also sage, $1.00 qt. Exch. for print sacks. Mrs. John Addison, Hartwell, Rt. 2. Dixie Butter Peas, 1/4 Ib. 30c; Colored Butterbeans, 1/4 lb., 25c; Also pure Midget Icebox watermellon Seed, 60c oz.; Pride of Ga. Watermelon, 50c doz. PP. Aree W. Y. Summers, Newnan, 5. 2 Olb Fashion Long Green Okra Seed, 1953 crop, 55c cup; White Multiplying Nest Onion, crop, 35 qt. Cleaned. Mrs. Geor- ge Floyd, Rockmart, Rt. 2. Recleaned Kobe Lespedeza, 20 b. here Jas.B. Woods, Brooks. Tel. 206-J Senoia. Cleaned White Nest Onion Sets, best multiplyers for spring planting, $1.35 gal.; $8.00 bu. PP = Ga. Miss Annie Ruth Weeks, ial. 1953 hand saved, pure yellow meat watermelon, 50c_ teacup. Mrs. L. A. Thompson, Cumming, Rt. 4. - 1000 bags Brown Top Millet Seed, good germ. and_ purity, $10.00 Cwt. FOB Richard Har- vill Millen, % Bousa Farm. Phone 428W. 500 bales oats, bright, baled without rain, $35.00 ton at my barn. Phone Marietta 82970 after 6 P M, or write G. S. Brown, Powder Springs, Rt. 1. Dynamite Popcorn and Stone Mtn. Watermelon Seed, 50c tea- cup; E. E. Kurtz, Marietta, Old Fashion Cornfield Bean Seed, 50c cup. Add postage. Mrs. Earl Swann, Union Point, Rt. 1. Good sound Citron Seed, $1.25 lb. Ralph Jones, Cadwell. Clean White Multiplying On- ions, $1.00 gal. PP. Mrs. Mary Free, Dial. 3 Tender white frostproof Eng- lish peas, 75c cup; 2 cups, $1.25; White Mush Peas, and Green Okra Seed, 40c cup; 3 cups $1.00; Red Speckled Crowder, White Blackeyed Peas, 35c cup; 4 cups, $1.00. Add postage. Clinton Smith, Ellijay, Rt. 3. Clean, white lima bean seed, id oe W. A. Rosser, Elberton, t4; Kobe lespedeza seed, combine run, 15 lb. L. A. Caldwell, Gay. Clean, white nest onions, $1.50 gal.; Limited amt. turnip and mustard seed mixed, 3 Tbls., 20c. ris Mrs. Sam Carter, Alma, Rt. Fresh Calif. multiplying beer seed, 20c start; 12, $1.00. PP Mrs. Earl Fincher, Rockmart, Rt. 2. 8000 Ibs. Cattain Millet, 8 Ib.; 500 Ibs, Brown Top Millet, 10c lb. bags. Purity See Sankie Po- Wrens. Ga. or ourson, Hazle- 1953 | Kobe Lespedeza Seed, clean, combine run, lic lb.; Recleaned, 22c lb.; No Johnson grass; Brown Top Millet, recleaned, 10c lb. Jack Findley, Stephens. Imp Long Green Okra, hand picked, cleaned, from _ select pods 65c 1b.; 5 Ibs. up 50c lb.; 5 Ibs. Imp. White Half Runner Garden Bean, 65c 1b.; $2.50 lot. Add _ postage, or COD. Mrs. L. A. Ellington, Lawrenceville, RFD 3: Va. Gold and 402 Tobacco Seed, cleaned, germ. test 90 pct., 50c oz.; 4 oz., $1.50; 1 lb. or more, $5.50 1b. Prompt shipment. George Y. Fletcher, Tifton, Rt. 3s Early Brown 6 Weeks 2 Crop Pea Seed, 5 cups, $1.25; Cream Crowders, 4 cups, $1.25; Tender Blue Pole Bean, and Streaked Half Runners, 2 cups, $1.25; White or Colored Bunch, also Colored Running Butterbeans large, $1.10 r 3 cups. Mrs. Clarence McMillian, Dacula, Rt. i: Choice Creaseback Bean Seed, 50c cup; Also Blakemore Straw-| berry- Plants, 90c C. PP. Mrs. Fred Aaron, Aska. 5 tons recleaned Kobe Lespe- deza, purity and germ. guar, $20 per 100 lb. bag. FOB. Mac Ogles- by, Hartwell, Rt. 2. Long Wide Leaf, Bull Face Tobacco Seed, grows 4-7 ft., 75c Tbl.; Okra, $1.00 lb.: Martin Gourd Seed, 3 packs; $1.00; Also Mastodon Everbearing Straw- berry Plants, $1.00 C; Sage and Catnip, $1.00 doz. Add postage L. J. Ellis, Cumming, Rt. 5. About 250 bu. bright oats, 90c per bu. bulk loaded at barn; 98c baged. Call before coming. Mil- ton P. Minchew, Jr., Macon, Rt. 3. Tel. 37030. _ Nice clean Jimson Weed Seed, $1.00 cup; Also Redeyed Crowd- er Peas, 25c cup; 2-cups, 45c. No chks., nor COD. PP in Ga. Alice Mashburn, Higdon. Stripped and White Half Run- ner Bean Seed, 55c large cup; 3 cups $1.50: Add postage. Mrs. Es a Patterson, Flowery Branch, Bi Lee Yellow Meat Watermelon, 40 seed, 10 and stamped envelope; Half pound, $1.25; $2.00 Ib.; Hearts of Gold Cantaloupe, also Okra Seed, 25e cup; White Mul- tiplying Onion Sets, $1.00 gal. Add postage. Mrs. P. E. Traylor, Rebecca. BEANS AND PEAS FOR SALE Old Time Tender White, and Striped Cornfield, also White and Speckled Half Runner Gar- den Beans, 55 teacup; 3 cups, $1.50; Blue Java Peas, 25c tea- cup; 5 cups, $1. Add pdstage. Miss Gennia Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1. s Baby Blackeyed Peas, gath- ered .without rain, treated for weevils, approx. 6 bu., 25e Ib. No small orders accepted. W. L. Smith, Hazlehurst, Rt. 2. White and Colored Bunch Butterbeans, 25 cup. or ex- change 1 cup beans for 1 print sack (3 alike); Also Butter Peas, 40c cup. Add _ postage: Ethel Crowe, Gainesville, Rt. 2. Colored Bunch Butterbeans, free of weevils, 25c cup. Plus postage. Mrs. Quy. Porter, Gainesville, Rt. 1 White Butter Peas and But- terbeans, early bunch var., 30c large cup; Mixed color But- terbeans, 25e Ib. All good con- dition. Add postage. Mrs. T. L. Lawson, Gainesville, Rt. 8. Leather Britches Beans, 50c Ib. plus postage. Mrs. Rosetta Hunnicutt, Dial, Brown Speckled Cornfield Beans, and Okra, each 50c cup; Small Pole Lima Butterbeans, 35 cup; White Cornfield. Beans, 50c cup; Peas, 35 cup. Add postage. Cora Mae Hammon- tree, Chickamauga, Rt. 2. White Tender, and Speckled Half Runner Garden Beans, 60c cup; Red Beakion Crowder and Blue Java Peas, 25 Ib. in 5 | lb, lots or more. Add postage. G, T. Brown, Bali Ground, Rt. 1 ; s Red Bunch Butterbeans, 35c cup; Old Time Striped Half Runner Bean, tender, good for late summer planting, 40c cup; Also Long Red Cayenne Hot Pepper, 20c pkt. PP. Mrs. Hors-| 5 ley, Waco, Rt. 2. Purple Hull Peas, Tender Garden Striped Half Runner and Pink Peanut Beans, ea. 50c cup; Cream Crowder Peas, 40c cup. Add postage. No Chks. oe M. Gentry, Ellijay, Rt. Old Time Tender. White and Striped Half Runner, Speckled Cutshort, and Pink Peanut Beans, 60c cup; White Salad Peas, 85c cup. No Chks. Mrs. Goble, Ellijay, Rt. 3. White, Striped, and. Black Half Runner Garden Beans, Mix- ed, all tender, bear until frost, 3 cups, $1. Add postage. Mrs. oe Bentley, Carnesville, Rt. Good tender Cutshort Corn- field Beans, 65c cup. Exch. 2 cups for 4 lbs. good pecans. Mrs. Preston Southerland, Elli- jay; Rtx::3. : . Alabama Clay peas, dont bear until September, weevils do not bother them, $10. bu. FOB. P. J. Sewell, Lavonia. Red speckled Crowder peas for eating or planting, 4 cups for $1.25 postpaid. No less sold. Exch. 4 cups for 4 Print sacks alike. Ea. pay postage. Mrs. ee L. Priest. Talking Rock. Rt. 300-350 bu. unmixed Whip- poorwill field peas, Ger. 98 pct, $5.50 bu. Every bu. guar: also 400 Ibs. honey drip cane seed, 15 lb. W. M. Hawle, Bowdon. SEED FOR SALE 24 lbs. Okra seed, 1953 crop, 60c lb. plus postage or 50c Ib. for lot. J. F. Wellborn, Rock Spring. - White multiplying onions, 900 bu. good river bottom white corn (not hybrid), shuck= ed, $2. bu. at farm 2 mi. N. Silver City, Hwy. U. S. A Theo Huges, Gainesville, t. af _* in shuck, red cob, large ears, Whatleys, $1.50 bu. my barn 1 mile off Hwy. 41, two miies NE Milner. R. M. Corley, Mik ner. Arond 100 bu. White Milling, and 200 bu. Yellow Corn; als 200 or more bales Lespedeza Hay for sale. J.. L. Wheat, Dalton, Rt. 4. PEANUTS AND PECANS FOR SALE 100 Ibs nice large budded pe-~ cans, 20c del. Less, add postage, No less 5 lbs to. party. Mrs. J. H. Lawrence, Middleton. seed or eating, $2100 pk; $6.00 bu.; Also Tender White Half Runner Garden Beans, 55c cup; Blue Java Peas, 25c Ib. in 5 Ib. lots or more. Add postage. P. B. Brown, Ball Ground, Rt. 1. Red Peanuts, 3-4 to hull, $2.00 peck; $7.00 bu.; Also White Rica Popcorn, 20 Ibs., $2.00. Add post- Mrs. Marie Holland, Dalton, gens 1953. Pecan Crop, good nuts, Stewarts 25c lb.; Seedlings, 20 Ib.; Schleys, 30c Ib. FOB. M. FE Jones, Metter, Rt. 1. Fresh Pecan Meats, halves $1 lb.; Pieces, 90c lb.; Also Fresh Walnut Meats, postage. Mrs. Carl Swann, Union Point, Rt. 1. Good 1953 Stuart Pecans, 20e lb.; Halves, 90c Ib.; Broken pieces, 75c lb. Add postage. W. H. Millirons, Buena Vista, Rt. 4. Assorted varieties pecans, in- cluding small Schley, 25c Ib del. Ist. and 2nd. zones; Shelled, mostly halves 85c. Geo. A. Mc- Arthur, Albany, 1503 Dawson $1.25 gal; 1953 hand saved dark | Rd green round yellow meat water- melon seed, 50c teacupful; pure Purple Hull black-eye crow- der peas, weevil treated, 20c lb. Add postage. Mrs. Johnnie Harmon, Calhoun, Rt. 2. Running. Pomegranate seed, 10e thimble full and_ self-ad- dressed envelope; 7 Year pepper seed, 10c for 15 pods and self- addressed envelope. Miss Dor- othy Pate, Tallapoosa. Rt. 1, Dipper, nest egg and other small gourd seed, 15c package. a John Weaver, Temple, Rt. Old fashioned garden bean seed, big and little white, pink and brown 6-wks. beans, spec- kled cutshorts, 65c cupful. Add pe Dessie Vick, Ellijay. Okra-seed, 50 teacupful. Add postage. Henry Ballew, Chats- worth. Rt. 2. petit ee CORN AND SEED CORN FOR SALE Pure Golden Bantam Corn, 25 lb. FOB. Boyd Gardner, Goggins, Box 99. About 100 Ibs. small, 1953 Pecans, 12-1/2c lb. plus postage. No chks. Money Orders. A. J. Sanders, Atlanta, 342 Clifford Ave., N. E. CR 3023. Some small size pecans, 15c Ib. and postage. O. B. Camp, Villa Rica. Large paper shell Pecans, Frotschers, 20e lb. up to 25 Ibs; 17-1/2c lb. from 25 to-50 Ib. lots; over 75 lbs. 15c lb; also few Schleys, same price. All FOB Mrs M, F. Gaddis, Quitman. Box 124, | PECAN AND OTHER FRUIT TREES FOR SALE Concord Grape, 2 yrs. old, root- ed, $1.00 ea.; 6, $5.00. E. E. Kurta, Marietta. : Rooted Brown Scuppernong Vines, 2 yrs old, Tbe ea.; Ever- Strawberry, $1.25 C; 500, $5.50. F, M. Combs~Washington. Scupperiiong cuttings, 75c doz. Add postage. No chks. nor stamps, or Fla. orders. Mrs. A. Below are -outstanding America. : cow was milked daily. Bemiston Tehee, owned Rydal, 4 4 years 3 months, average HERD IMPROVEMENT REGISTRY tested lactations through the Herd Improvement Regis- try program of The Holstein-Friesian Association of Testing under HIR requires that all animals in the herd be tested. Testing has been supervised by in all cases, Georgia State College of Agriculture, in eooper- ation with the national association. Age refers to age of cow at time record began. Milk- ing Classification (2X,3X) refers to number of times 525 lbs. butterfat, 13,740 lbs. 3 months, average quarts daily18. Aaggie Mutual Homestead, owned by V. R. Nally, 4 Ibs. butterfat, 11, Clemsby Beauty, owned by University of Georgia,, Athens, 464 Ibs. butterfat, 11,195 lbs. milk, 2X, 365 days, 5 years 3 months, average quarts dailytl4. cows completing officially by Canaan Farms, Chipley, milk, 2X, 365 days, 4 years 540 Ibs. milk, 2X, 365 days, quarts daily15, 75 or 80 bu. good ear corn - Large Pink Skin Peanuts, for $1.00 lb. Add- bearing Gem and Blakemora_ W. Pettyjohn, Summerville, Rt. 2. j i iB i eae} > om Rg PECAN AND OTHER | FRUIT TREES FOR SALE Muscadine, Scuppernong - Grepe, -12, $1.50; Plum, Crab- apple, Early May Cherry Trees, $1.75 doz.; Hazelnut, bearing size, Blueberry, $1.00 doz.; Red Gold Strawberry, $1.00 C; Red #hd Black Raspberry, $1.25 doz:; Gooseberry, $1.50 doz. Mrs. F. M. Eaton, Dahlonega, Rt. 1. Hazelnut Raspberry, $1.00 doz.; -Sassafras with roots, Muscadine Vine, 4, $1.00; Blueberry, Horse- mint, Garlic Bulbs, 50 c doz.; Blackberry, Dewberry, 85c doz. Add postage. Mrs. D. M. Holla- way, Dahlonega, Rt: 1. Walnut Trees, 50c ea.; Mtn Huckleberry Bushes, 50c doz. Mrs. R. H. Clark, Gainesville, Vt. vi ; Hunt Scuppernong, rooted vines, 4, $1.00 A. G. Robinson Lawrenceville, Rt. 3._ Scuppernong, Muscadine Grape, vigorous, rooted vines, 4, $2.00. Cultural instructions free. Mrs. Annie G. Whatley, Helena. Several hundred pecan trees, all sizes, mostly seedlings, cheap in nursery. You dig them. Mrs. Bi R. Morgan, Americus, Leslie Seed. Blue Damson Plum, 2 1/2 - 4 f.,85c ea.;- 3; -$1.00;-W-+ T, Moorhead, Bowersville. POTATOES FOR SALE 1150 bu. P. R. Govt. insp. and A pe Seed Potatoes, $5.00 bu.; 5 bu._Cooper Skin P. R. Bunch, $6.00 bu. Wilton Hallman, Bax- Jey, Rt. 1. -_ 110 bu. certified vine cutting PR Bunch Sweet Potatoes, $5.00 bu. Less if whole lot is sold. James N. Feagin, Cotton. (Mit- chell Co.). (Phone collect, Pel- ham, Ga 2494). Certified Seed Potatoes Bunch, PR, vine grown, per bushel basket, $4.00. FOB Mc- Rae. Richard Wilson, Alamo. Bunch Type P. R. Seed Pota- toes, vine: grown, govt. insp., had selcted, certified, $4.00 bu. basket. FOB. Tom Anderson, McRae, Ster Rt. Seed Potatoes, Bunch PR, vine grown, certified, $4.00 bu. basket, FOB. J. C. Anderson, McRae. - Excellent quality certified Bunch P. R. Sweet~ Potatoes. Write for price and terms. A. K: Harwell, Rome, 1000 E. 2nd Ave. Tel. 20390. Certified Seed Potatoes, Bunch P. R., vine grown, $4.00 bu. . basket. F. O. Browning, McRae, RFD No. 1. HAY AND STRAW - (WHEAT, OATS, ETC.) FOR SALE Good quality peanut hay, de- livered in truckloads. Write for prices. James Lewis, Arabi. 75 tons good runner peanut hay, $15. ton at my barn. Will ee load. Write. Or phone 161. rank F. Alston, Jr., Box -111. = New crop No. 1 quality pea- nut hay, delivered anywhere in trailer load lots. Write for rices. V. H. Burke, Ashburn, FD No. 1. 5 tons bright Sonal hay, 25. ton at my farm. Rudolph rown, Twin City. Bright Hay: Oat, $35. ton; escus, $25. ton. FOB Roswell. . M. Thomas, Roswell. Tel. 6260. 150 bales bright wheat straw for sale. Joe M. Almand, De- catur, 515 Second Ave, S. E. Several hundred bales good Jespedeza and bean hay, baled without rain, twine tied, at ir price. Roy Sosebee, Daw- - gonville, Rt. 1. Good bright Sericea Hay, st. cutting, also. Fescue with espedeza, $1. per bale, at arn. All large bales. T. oore, Milner, Rt. 1. (Old Dr. Huguely Farm), 20 tons Kobe lespedeza hay, baled without rain, 75 bale; $30. ton at my farm. M. A. Callaway, Jr., Molena, |Ranch. Tel. 157-J or 113. Baled Oat; Sericea, or Les-- Parrott,- HAY AND STRAW _ (Wheat, Oats, etc.) FOR SALE w 11 tons good quality bright bean hay for $42.50 to at barn. T. H. Hasty, Kensington, ~ 5 tons grass hay, $30. ton at barn; Also about 6 tons baled oats, $35. ton. Baled without rain. Robert E. erp Ap- pling. Coastal Bermuda .Hay and Baled Oats, $30. ton; Brown Top Millet, $25. ton. FOB, our barn. Richard Harvill, c/o Bousa Farm, Tel. 428 W. 100 tons bright baled hay, baled without rain, combina- tion of Bermuda, Crab, and Dallas Grass, no weeds, $25. ton. FOB my barn. J. Lynwood a Thomaston, Rt. 2. Tel. 9 Approx. 200 bales Kudzu, Fescue, and Gatan Hay, baled separately, aay per bale. FOB My barn. U. Bowman, Bu- ford. (on Robets Cross Rd.). Phone 3922. Top quality uciens Lespede- za, Brown Top Millet of Grass Hay, varieties baled separately. $25: $30. and $35. ton *Pas Newton, Madison, c/o Choctaw pedeza Hay, 80c per bale at farm. Also baled oat, wheat, rye straw, 50c per bale. 6 mi. So. Royston on State Hwy. 281. See. P. S. Cape, at. farm. Or contact owner. Olin W. Guin, Athens. : 24 tons excellent quality peanut hay (peanuts taken up after storm rains) $23. ton at my farm 7 mi. SE Cuthbert. Tel 2320._D Donald Peavy, Cuthbert, Rt. 3. 3000 bales hay, poison free, runner bean and crab grass, cattail millet and sorghum mixed, $25. ton at barn. Elmer Freisch, Finleyson. 10 tons clean, good Sericea Lespedeza Hay, $25. ton at barn 3% mi. E. Sandersville, Rt. 24. E. Pierce Wood, San- dersville. Tel. 2341. 80 tons No. 1 Bermuda Hay, free of weeds, grown after Crimson Clover and nighly fertilized, $40. ton. W. H. Brooks, Hazlehurst. . Baled Lespedeza Hay, reason- able. Joseph E. Benton, Nor- cross, Rt. 1. 10 tons mixed Rae lespe- deza and fescue hay, baled without rain, $32.50 ton at barn; 75c per bale. C. L. Hol- combe, Buchanan. Tel 2604 or 30 to 40 tons Bernie Les-. pedeza Scricea hay, baled with- |: | out rain, $25. ton FOB - Mg 9 mi. So. Barnesville on U. Hwy. 341. W.-P. Elder, Culloden, phone 3472. a Thomaston 600 bales first rade: Soy Bean hay, $40. ton at my farm, located in East Armuchee Val- eg eee Lanier, LaFayette. ' MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Hatching eggs, Camp-Osborne strain, Black Orpingtons, from 40 yrs, breeding flock, 15, $3. Parcel post. Mrs. J. A. Camp, Roberta. - : Hatching eggs, from pure- bred prize winning, show Ban- tam, Buff Cochin Single Comb, and RI Red Bantams, 15, $3. Parcel Post. C. H. Overby, Co- lumbus, 3609 - 14th Ave. Bantam Eggs, Golden Se- bright, from selected birds, $1. doz. prepaid. E. M. Lee, Sr., Omaha. GOURDS: 15 Dipper Gourds, some will hold quart pr less, $3.75; Also Pumpkin Seed, large old fashion variety, 15c doz. Mrs. Orene Poteat, Buchanan, Rt. 2. Martin and Dipper Gourds, 25c ea.; Larger sizes, 50c and $1, ea.; Small mixed, 10c ea.; Gourd Seed, $1. cup. Add post- age. Mrs. W. E. Wooten, Camilla Millen, | Pepper, 85c lb. Add postage. se | of mildew and holes, . was + ea, Add postage. Mrs. a Express. hel capacity gourd. Write at {tary conditions. Mrs. Cora: A. LANEO! Seon SALE MEATS (FRESH AND CURED) Four 1953 country cured. hams, 25-30 lbs. 65c Ib.; 2] country cured shoulders, 15-20 lbs., 40 Ib.; At my home. L. A, Thompson, ae Rt. 4, PEPPER: ' Cowhorn Hot - Pepper, 8-10 in. long, 25 large Tablespoon; 5, $1.00. Send stamps or money. |Z Robert Waters, Seu, Rt. 2; Box wes 1953 Long Pod Dried Heal Hot . Mrs. F. A. Harmon, - STs cals houn, Rt. 2. ROOTS & HERBS: Sweet Basil Herbs, organic- ally grown, 1% oz. glassful, 30c. M. OBrien, Atlanta, 3788 Pow- ers Ferry Rd., N.W. Yellow root, wild, cherry bark, sweet gum bark, yellow dock, 30c -lb.; Queen of the Meadow, 40c lb.; white sassa- fras, 35c Ib. Add postage. Mrs. ae peenniett: Alpharetta, Rt. White sacks, 100 1b. cap. nor heavy weave, 30c ea.; Print, some 3 alike, several odds, washed, ironed, 100 lb. cap. 45c SX Cisse Fricks, Talking Rock, Rt. 1, Box 151, White Feed - Sacks, no. let- ters, good cond., 100 lb. cap.,. $18. C; Some with letters, $16. Major peckil ae Gainesville, Rt. Ly 6 Print Sacks, $2. Aaa: age, L, J: Ellis, Cumming, SAGE: Hand peas Leaf Size. dried if the shade, free . of trash, for sale. Mrs. Marie Hol- land, Dalton, te es Hand pike washed, shade dried ground sage, $2.75 lb. PP. Mrs. G. H. Eley, White Plains. SYRUP: 100 gals. high quality sugar cane syrup in gallon jugs, $1.50 gal. at farm. S.5k: Harvey, Glenville, Rt..2. 24 WALNUTS & WALNUT MEATS: Several bushels Black Wal- nuts, 53 crop, bright meat, hulled, dry, for sale at my house. Mrs. R. H. Whelchel, Dawsonville, Rt. 3. MISCELLANEOUS _ _- WANTED BEE HIVES nee Want bee hive complete with! supers. State price. J. F. ae Atlanta, 2920 sen ae Se. SEED: Want 4 or 5 lbs. Mun: nee Jack Puckett, t Want seed of large half bus- x. Bean) Se once. W. L. ster Atlanta, 1221 Gordon St., S. Ww. SYRUP: Want cane syrup in pails or gallons, prepared under sani- Davis, Atlanta, 35 Linden Ave., N..E. c/o Crawford Long Hos- pital. BEES WAX:. ; Want 3 or 4 lbs. beeswax. Mrs. C.)M. Spears, Cordele, Rt. 4, Box 141. HONEY: Want river swamp honey. Contact Bessie Quarterman, Val- dosta, 7 Youngs Lane. PLANTS: Want Rhubarb plants. to set in garden. Write price. L. W. Fuller, Hiram. POTATOES: : - Want Sweet Potatoes for bed- ding and banking, from 10-100 bu. State price, amount, grade. Joe Harvey, Pelham, Rt. er |See only. No letters. 214 aes y e {horn Bulls, Want to ee 2H mowing, machine and good 2 H wagon| for 300 Ibs. Ky. Fescue Seed, and |. 300 lbs. Reseeding Crimson| Clover. Letters ans. W. S. ieee chell, Cairo, RFD RDS eR Want to buy Sorghum Cane Seed (for quail feed). Raymond | 7629638, perf ie ge Bambino S. M mos. old, Dbl. Z. Adams, Atlanta, 2410 Boe os ae ne Ave., Ss. W. Tel. Fa. 2502. TREES, (FRUIT): Se Want Japanese Persimmon, 5 Blue Damson Plum Trees. State 7 size, age, price. G. W, Dae | " 10! Watkinsville, - CATTLE FOR SALE Tersey Milch Cow, freshened Dec. 13, first calf, giving 3 gals. di a g. g Pie Se ae A. for sale. HAS Dyche, JR: lanta,. oe ioe Mill Bie Se E. FA. 2 2 good cows: eth ieebanes't Jan. 12, one 2nd. calf, other 3rd. |-2 calf. Tel. Lawrenceville, Ga. 2745, or contact. C. J. Lilburn, Hill Rd Reg. beeen Mieke Buts,| 4% mos. to 17 mos. old, $125 $200. ea. Z. J. nee Red Oak. Jersey Cow with Ist. calf | | (heifer 1 mo. old Jan. 14), both | I $75. 6 mi. N. Perry, on UCSF eo Paul cee, ue Valley, 2: ane Polled White oe : Rea Heifers, wt. about 500 Ibs. ae M. Welsh, Macon, Rt 2, Heath ae Phone 3- 8983, s Fe: 1 reg. horned Hereford Bull, 5 yrs. old, $250. Chas. N. Chand- ler, Milledgeville, RED 3 bulls, at my farm in Bryan sGiog at Richmond Hill. Walter W. Meeks, ae Atlanta, 101) &t Marietta St. N. OW. WA 6674. ss Fersey milch cow, - fresh in with 4th calf. Good qualities, |. 3 to-4 gal., B. Richardson, Mctatyre, Reg., Angus. herd bull, oo breeding, also 3 choice Angus heifers. J. Harris Dew, Atlanta. Battle Ave, z CH 33 Bred and open aa Bae ford heifers, from disease free herd, of good type and in ex-} cellent cond. for sale of exch. for Hay, Oats and Corn. P. F. Patton, Shade Dale. phone | Monticello 5123. - 20 Hereford Cows ida calves, 3 Jersey Cows, 1. reg. Poll |] Hereford Male 2 yrs. old, 1400 lbs., at my farm in East Ar-| muchee Valley. ds Lanier. LaFayette, Rt. 3. |calf due Feb. 20, 195: Kent, Ri _ Arcado eee Killian : 6 young, Reg. Santa Gertrage Carrolltor breeding stock, for sale,| .. | $125. at barn. Wm, Large | Jers -milk, qualities j 900 lbs., $90. J sire, een chan reserve. iT cham: _|Feb.; One sow to One eac , Fa Write for | Also I1 | reasonable. Wey large wks. old, chol weigh aroun FOB. Will ship ae 00 at Hill, -Mauk. : SPC Pigs ) and ere name Pin Nice Guernsey Bull Caves o one 12 mos. old, bers by arti- ay insemination, from good producing dams. Geo. M. Wick- P er, Americus, Shorthorn and Polled Shor =e 8 mos. to 3_ yrs. old, One Polled Shorthorn and 1 Shorthorn Cow, both bred, i. all reg., $100.-$350. Burt Ben: | h nett, Moultrie, Rt. 3. Reg. Angus, Sunbeam bie zx , or choice |. 2 of several young bulls, all ex-|I ing, 3 yrs. old Bull cellent breeding. W. F. Dew, Bu Calhoun, RFD 2. Phone. 4016. "precdae one open the bred heifers, will torium, Moultrie, on Friday, ford and Polled Hereford. cattle, bulls, co W. E. ee S "shle- ee Regis be held at L February 12. Jesup, 1 P. M25_ ee ohneon The Georgia eee Kae ss production sale on Wednesday, Febr . Angus bulls and gus females will-be so d. All animals catalogue or information, nee u aid eu | 28 PAGE FIVE eo NO.1 NO. 2 No.3 Noe Chatham Co. sy, Savannah 24.60 24.00 23.30 : 23.70 < 22,87 21.76 21.10 Columbus Serkiers Columbus - 24.00. Dodge Co. Stock Barn, Ashburn 24.54 23.75 23.00 : 23.50 : 23.00 21.50 | 20.20. Elbert L/S Auct. Barn, Elberton 2325 --23.00-- 21,00 20.00 24.30 23.90 23.50 21.90 Jesup Stockyard, Jesup A4.35. 24.34 22.97 = 20.10 ee Millen L/S Mkt., Millen . 24.50 24.00 22.50 22.25 25.50 24.50 23.00 Muscogee L/S Beis Columbus 23.75 22.65 Ocilla L/S Co. Ocilla te 2A 2y. 93,20 24.75 24.55 23.75 23.10 ie 25.60 25.20 24.50 = Seminole L/S Auct. a Donalsonville 24.80 25-60 23.45 22.05 Wrightsville us 24.08 oaks sinuses Bie Mkt, Hagan ~- 24.30. 23.79. 22.50 21.60 Sutton L/S Co., Sylvester 24.53 24.45 23.92 22.05 oe : : 5 : : : 3 oy, 24.60 24.00 22.95 22.65 Swainsboro $#/Yd., Swainshere a 23.90 22.70 29.86 Waycross L/S Mkt., Waycross = 25.10 24.42 23.20 21.50 2AT2 23.75 2295 23.71 20.92 24.30 23.60 21.50 Appling Co. L/S & Mkt..Serv., Baxley Atos 24.10 23.00 20.45 a . : 4 40 23.85 22.80 : aaa Cotfee Co. L/S co, Douglas 24.72 24.48 23.22 21.90 ce 270 22.54 . Dawson L/S Go., Dawson 24.75 24.15 22.85 ee ak, 3 "Farmers Stockyard, Arlington 2438 24.00, 23.00 21.75 aoe 23.05 apige Farmers Stockyard, Sylvania 1455 24.10 22.50 (21.80 2875 oe 23.20 2255 MRae Stockyard, McRae 24.90 23.95 23.40 20.60 a 24.45 ~ 22.90 20.90 Metter Ls Mkt., Metter . 24.90 24.35 22.86 22.00 a z oe 7) Milchel Co. L/S Co, Comilta 24.55 24.10 23.10 22.30 : Se ae es Smith Stockyard, Augusta 24.60 23.75 22.90 ie a se aca |, To LS Co. Glennville 24.65 24.03 23.00 21.25 ape 4 oe 22.90 Troup Co. Sale, LaGrange 26.40 anny: 23.00 21.60 24.15 23.90 23.40 January 20 Black's Com. Barn, Gainesville 24.25 23.00 22.00 . Gainesville 24.90 22.25 19.50 14.00 Sota 25.00 23.75 ym. Co., Quitman 24.90 24.29 23.35 21.85 Claxton Stockyard, Claxton 24.75 24.21 23.30 7450 23.78 23.00 22.50 Coosa Valley Livestock Com., Rome 26.00 24.60 22.90 : 24.45, 24.00 22.10 21.00 Hazlehurst L/S Mkt., Hazlehurst 24.40 23.50 22.30 20.80 24.08 23.79 22.75 20.20 ; am eo eae ata 3 ao Peoples L/S Mkt., Cuthbert 24.27 24.00 23.00 22.68 226.00 24.20. 33:30. - 21.45 = . u ~ | Ragsdale McClure Com. Co., Rome 25.70 23.90 21.00 ae oe Seaboard, Stockyard, Colquitt 2485 24.60 23.25 21.70 ~ 25.00: 23.60 21.50 : s 75.00 24.20 23.45 24.25 + Union Stockyard, Albany - 24.76 24.35 23.10 22.40 kt doe sik ee 24.50 : 23.79 22.95 23.20. Wilkes Co. Stockyard, Washington 24.80 22.70 21.60 ; Wrightsville Stockyard, Wrightsville 24.50 23.80 Soe - January 21 i ee ee F288) pemers L/S Coy Dowalos > 94.53 23.96 22.80 21.28 g pees: 7200 * ae Fitzgerald L/S Auction, Fitzgerald ~ 24.31 23.65 23.21 oe 2 AMENDED RULES And REGULATIONS The Bulletin, approximately 290,000 circulation week- ly, created for and financed by the Georgia Farmer, is miailed under provisions of Act of June 8, 1900, and musi conform to certain RULES. These rules prohibit noticeseither wanted or for sale for Dealers, Commercial Nurseries, Hatcheries, Rabbitries Business Men (engaged in trade of commodities listed), Farmers, or even Housewives, who buy farm com- modities for the purpose of re-selling in any form: Also prohibits notices for Non-ResidentsOnly notices are permitted that are absolutely essential to Agriculture and the furtherance of the Agricultural Indusiryand may be accepted for publication only from FARMERS or other parties actively engaged in farming. This includes all Farm Products, Farm Machinery, actually used on farm and absolutely essential to farming, and STRICTLY FARM WORK ON FARM notices. S Notices must have personal name and address at-, tached and must be from parties of LEGAL AGEFor Minors, Box Numbers, Farm Names, Initials, In Care of General Delivery as. addressare NOT accepted for publication .... notices of similar nature from individ- uals or members of same household (except where parties OWN INDIVIDUALLY, GROW and RAISE individually, the products and commodities listed), are not intention- ally published in same issue: notices not to exceed forty- one or two words to give proper meaning. NEW COPY must be sent for each time published. WE RESERVE THE 9 RIGHT TO RE-WRITE ALL NOTICES. | The following items and items of similar nature and classification are STRICTLY PROHIBITED: Tin, pipe (except for irrigation), electric and other fencing, concrete mixers, shingles, timber (except as grow- ing on, and sold as part of land in special farm land edition, lumber, cord, pulpwood, roofing, automobiles, trucks, busses. jeeps, trailers, saw and shingle mills, pow- er units unless absolutely esseniial for farming), eleciric drills and presses, feather picking machines, feather beds, pillows (feathers alone may be listed), waterers, feeders, water heaters, ranges, shelters, stalls, stanchions; and equipment not absolutely essential to poultry, dairy, and livestock raising in connection with agricultural industry, bug catchers, rabbit hutches, health products, remedies, cures, earthworms, fishing poles, other fishing equip- ment, bamboo (except roots as growing), charcoal, brooms, cotion-picking sheets, hog oilers; dogs, cats, rais; ham- sters, ferrets, mice, canaries, other birds, parrots, mon- keys, foxes, owls, coons, fish, squirrels, OPossums, deer, pet and wild animals of any kind, skins, pelts: cotton and other poisons, coffins, musical instruments, antiques, in- dian relics, corn beads, pine cones, ete., ice boxes, deep freeze units, refrigerators, (except dairy equipment), wash- ing, sewing machines, electric and other irons, stoves, home furnaces, baby carriages, bicycles, motorcycles, tire shrinkers, shop tools, except Blacksmith tools used on farm, butter molds, tarpaulins, tents, jewelry, quilts, scraps, crocheting, knitting, cloth, clothing, sewing mer- chandise, store fixtures. home and office furniture, hears- es, lamps, pictures, barber shops, meat market items, in- valid chairs, businesses of any kind, lost or strayed live- stock, addresses of parties, together with notices of HAV- ING SOLD OUT of certain items; bottles, cans, Jars, car- toons, baskets, crates, pistols, shotguns, matrimonial, so- cial, other similar items, Christmas decorations, holly, wreaths, misiletoe (except as growing in ground and sold as ornamental nursery stock for transplanting) and all other similar items. Flowers, flower seed, bulbs, ornamental nursery stock published once a month only, and notices must be received not later than 20th of month preceding publica- tion: One sack notice monthly for individualFarm Land Notices twice yearlySpring and Fall. No charge for publishing notices nor subscription rateNon-resident subseribers acceptable. AH eligible notices published according to classification as prompily as possible, = Tne Bulletin does not assume any responsibility for notices (published or unpublished) nor for transactions resulting from printed notices, but we use every possible means within our jurisdiction to prevent fraud. TOM LINDER, Commissioner, STATE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Elizabeth Hynds _ Editor-Notices Georgia Farmers Market Bulletin HOGS FOR SALE HOGS FOR SALE 12 reg. SPC Pigs, about 2 1/2} Purebred Duroe Pigs, Wa mos. old, 35 Ibs., (range in color ant stook, 4-6 mos, ol $2 - 50-50 to 20-80) $35.00 ea. at my| $40.00 oa, elther se Pots ange le for same. M 2weome, barn. Or will ship: Lamer Alt-| 1 man, Alma, Re. eraville, 21 head healthy Hampshire marked shoats, average wt. 45lbs castrated, 30c lb. at my home, 5 mi. W. Metter near 46 paved highway. L. H. Edenfield, Still~ more. s Excellent, Reg. Hereford pigs, 8 wks. old Feb 11, 1954 Papers and shipped COD, $25.00 ea., or you can make your own pick at $20.00 ea. at my farm. Letters ans, Leonard Fleming, Hartwell, Reed Creek Rd. i Hogs for sale. J. L. Wheat, Dalton, Rt. 4. : HORSES AND MULES FOR SALE One saddle horse, 1 mule, also 1H wagon for sale. See at my home. Dr. J. T. King, Thomas- ville, Monticello Rd. Two Saddle Mares one 6 yrs. old, other 3 yrs old, gentle work to cart; Also 4 Mules out of lot of 16 all good, 4-12 yrs. old, work anywhere. Letters ans. E. L. Duke, Fort Valley, Box 370. Young mare mule $100.00. Or take hay as part payment. Ray- mond C. Porch Macon, Spring- dale Dr. Phone 55859. Good mare mule, around 11 yrs old, 1300 lbs., $50.00 at my place at Tanners, Mill. G. R. Tanner, Gainesville, Rt. 3. Good Mare Horse, $50.00 my farm Jewel Cates, Lithonia, Rt. 4 yr. old mare for sale. Joseph E. Benton, Norcross, Rt. 1 Black Mare Horse, -perfect cond., 1100-1200 lbs., 8 or 9 yrs. old, gentle, strong for sale. See. J. T.. Williams, Turin. _ 1 large work horse, 5 yrs. old, also large black mule, and sev- eral farming implements, for sale cheap my place N. Roose- velt Hwy. 3 1/ Palmetto. G, Adams, Newnan, Rt. 2, Box 318. 9008 size work mules for sale. . F.xBaxter, Grantville. RABBITS AND CAVIES FOR SALE 8 White Rabbits with pink eyes, 3 does 5 bucks, lot for $15 at my home. Gary Baler, Mit- chell, Rt. 1, Box 121. 1 Sr. pair Black Dutch, non- related, ped. ready to breed,|N Lamar. Brantley, : Wrightsville, rabbits for sale cheap. at 5 and 8 wks. old, 9 matured 515, excellent markings, $5.00. R. Rte 2: 4 does and 2 fine bucks, mix od Phillips, Roberta, Rt. 2. . White and Red NZ Rabbits, 22 does, 3 bucks. Make offer. M. VerSery, Augusta, Rt. 2, Box HONEY BEES AND BEE SUPPLIES FOR SALE Fancy Chunk Comb Honey, packed in 2%lb. big mouth jars, 12 to-case, $6. Cs, (30. Ibs.), FOB. E. J. Lewis, Nahunta. 1953 crop bone nal sorghum syrup, sealed in No. 3 tin cans, for sale. G. R. Tucker, Harlem. 10 lb. pails No, 1 Extracted Honey, $8. del. 3rd. zone by mail; One case wide mouth 5 - Ib; Jars. Gomb, $7.50 exp. collect. (Only 2 cases); 2 barrels (drums), 56. gal. cap, 12 tb. to gallon, 10 Ib. FOB. Drums re- turned when empty. Rey. Curd Walker, Adrian, Rt. 1. '12 stands Italian honey bees, hives complete with supers; Alson extra supers other bee supplies. Contact. F. ,O. Smith, corel P.O. Box 226. Tel. POULTRY FOR SALE BANTAMS: Bantam chickens and pigeons of all kinds for sale. Tommy George, Eatonton. 4 bantam pullets, 5 mos. old, 75e ea} also 12 baby chicks 7 wks. old and mother hen, $3.50; 8 bantams, 3 mos. old for $3.00. ames Schinell, Atlanta, 2677 Phare Rd. N. &. GR 4390, ~ mi. Sourth of SAL --7 common mixed nice ba tam roosters, 3 grown, 50c ea; 'frier size, 25c ea. come after. H. M. Bates. Kennesaw. Rt. 2. lish bantams, also other mixed bantams, at my place. Come Marietta St. N. W I, Red bantams, $4.00; 2 nice bantam hens, good stock, $1.00. Paul Caudill, Rome, wood St. Bantams: rooster and 5 hens, Top-Knots, $8.00; rooster, 3 hens, R. I. Reds, $7.00; 2 one year old Jap Silkie roosters, $2.00 ea. Boyd Williamson, Commerce. CORNISH, GAMES AND GIANTS: : One 2 yr. old purebred Allen Roundhead game cock and 5 purebred hens, $25.00 for lot. Theo C. West, LaFayette. Rt. 2. Cornish roosters, $1.50 ea. W. M. Chambers, Milan, Rt. 2. - 4 Roundhead cocks, 2 yrs. old, Jimmy Johnson and Hulsey cross also 8 stags, yr. old in March, same breeding, $7.50 ea. E. B. Hollingsworth, Abbeville. Rt. 2. 2 Blue Cuban stags and 1 pul- let, also 1 White Speck stag and hen, 3-4 lb. $8.00 for lot. W. H. Wright. Hemp. * == ~ LEGHORNS: 5 50 White Leghorn 4-A grade pullets, 10 mos old, reasonably priced. G. W. Wilson, Barnes- ville. Rt. 1. : ae BERRIGOLDS CHICK- 2 hens and rooster, 1952 and 1953 hatch, $7.00; also 10 Berri- gold young hens, $19.00 FOB my RR station. Mrs. L. E. Sanders, Buchanan, Rt. 2. ee PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS, ~8 dif. var., Pigeons, Doerun, Rt. 3. Reeves pheasant hens, $8.00 ea. D. Kennedy, Quitman. Rt. 2. 3 Ringneck pheasant hen and 1 cock, $12.00 or swap for same value quail or chickens. Mrs. J. a 2 Whittemore, Douglasville. "Large Northern quail, nice, strong birds, $4.00 pair. Zack ee Atlanta, 1879 Nort Ave., 1 pr. India Blue Peafowl, 4 yrs. old, for sale Mrs. Dorothy B, Argroves, Greenville. Common pigeons, all colors, $1.00 Branch, Enigma, Rt. 1. Select White Kings, guar. mat- ed prs., producers of 16-20 squabs a year, 14-18 oz ea. for sale. Re- cords with every pr. James Beat- pe Waycross, 305 Stephenson Early 1953 hatch Ringneck pheasants, full plumage, cocks, $4.00 ea; hens, $3.00. Billy Steele, Eastman, Rt. 2. 2 7 6 pe hens, 1951 and 1952 hatch $12.50. Bill Cochran, Toc coa. Box 241. ons, mated and banded. Special price, $3.00-to $5.00 pr; also pure Show-Bred Modena pigeons, Blacks, Whites, Red and White, Blue and White. Same price as bus, 3609 14th Ave. 1953. hatch Chinese Ringneck cocks for sale or trade for hens of same age. Mrs. J. H. Spann, Griffin, Rt. 2, phone 6180. 25 pr. Bob White quail, 1952 hatch, 8 pr, Chukars, 11 Ring- neck pheasant hens and 2 cocks 1952 hatch, also 9 White guineas, and 11 -Silver Duckwing ban- tams, laying, 1953 hatch, 5 O. E. Black Brested Reds. J. L. Tade, Macon, 2395 New Clinton Rd. TNRKEYS, GUINEAS GEESE, DUCKS, ETC. FOR SALE _ 14 geese, $2.50 ea. a place, 3 mi. No. Soperton. Leo Mimbs, Soperton. ; : . (soon lay) and tom Yr. old in April, extra large, $35.00 for the Rt. 3, Box 125. phone Jonesb: [377% hae Pr. white crested black Po- after. Loyd H. Green, 1145 W. : zt pr. purebred Show Type R.| 28 Elm- MISCELLANEOUS (FRIZZLE| > eee QUAIL, ETC. FOR}, White | Kings, Runts, ete. John Causey, r. 8 pr. $2.00. M. O. Earl|' Purebred Racing Homer pi __|Edd Stone, Adai urebred Racing Homer pige-| Saeed oe Homers. C. H. Overby, Colum+| White Holland turkeys, 3 hens|" ship. C n Cleveland. Rt. 2. Law Grey game and__pullets, Madigan Gre 1 Roundhead 6-1 4 hens, $12. Gainesville. Rt PEACOCK, P. PIGEONS, E _ Few Racing* Ho seamless banded, bloddlines, $2 Lamar Brantley Hea ee 2 cocks and | hatch Black Mutant $10. or $3.50 ea. J. L. Crittend TNRKEYS, GUI! ETC. FOR SALE Nice, young Bro for sale. Mrs. J Pineview, R BANTAMS_ _B. B. Old Engl tams, pullets $2. $1.00 ea. Cannot trio. Mo with somback, Eas ting, fob. | Macon, 327 Spri " White Legh stock, $3.00 pr. F Dunwoody. Phi rooster, just lot. Write, or mi. S Alma. Alma; Rt. 2. Bantams: 1 e bright, Silver ridge Cochin rooster, all pure Victor Rainey, D CORNISH, G. Dark Cornish, Leg Cockerels, rat 10 mos. old, 3 Hens, $11.50; | Rooster, 2 yrs. old, ii] ers, B B. type, : hatch, $2.50 E, Sandersville Stns oe ee Cockerels, from p $2.25 ea.; Cockerel hens or more; Pheasants, $3.00 ea.: Bob White Quail, $4 en Sebright Bantams Mixed Bantams, 75c ue hen, 3 pullets, 2 .yong roosters, Contact. Charl trios in M Pullets, 2, rett, Gaines roosters, f 4. Mrs, Ralph Carr, College Park, |Jot. Oro 00: |.pr.; young, $3.50 pr. G. W. Wil- .| liams, Columbia, Ri. 1, Box 808 ips, Jack- 05. Tel. 5163. AS, ee nous ellow Butf ones 50. Two roosters Roosters, $2.00. ea.; 2, ship. ee ne Hol- tO ite Se BR Hens; ath Fl at my home, owe: oan ee Bicain, Pe ( hersle 6 mos. old, ; of NH Red, Cornish, blood (hybrid), $6 poder: good lay- . Yancey, At-| Epps. St. De. UINEAS, DUCKS, | OR SALE: Guineas, BI: 50 ea. foe Dupree, Jr. Guineas, $ 25 ea. hn S. Pad id Ave. S. ~E. yr. old turkey hen ~home. Will not ship. arge nice quail, May _ 1953. hatch, as breeders, $2.75 ngneck Pheasants, $15. Will ship. Taek Senior Pheas- eons, India ] any full charge. Ss arling | tree St. N. E. Tel, Office At. , Fairburn, Camp-| ~*| sale, M. C. Coker, Stone Moun- | tain. Tel. 6205. | toms, 3 hens, $20. pr. No chks. Mrs, Ruby Davis, Pelham, Rt. 1, Box 108. WYANDOTTES: ales very eg -| $1.50 ea. Geo. Leckie, Roswell, REDS: NH, RI, PARMENTERS LETC . Box 104, Tel. 2566, | ing best stock available, $3. ea.; | Also *{ all colors, 75c ea. Luther S. But- Rt.) B.'De is 5 + 208. Ave., N. W. Em, ir | erates, No chks. Mrs. R. C. San- 1g ers, $11., or $2. ea. FOB. Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Martin. cae King pigeons, ae stock, working, old birds, $5. Williams Dairy. Northern Bob White Gast. bred from 2. dif. strains, May and June hatch, $5. pr. Shipped oa express only, Ra 8982. J. E. ins, Atlnta, 1531 Athens Rarer Ss. Wo Large Bob. White ui any number of pairs for sale. Let- ters ans. Joe Collier, Arlington. TURKEYS, GUINEAS, DUCKS, GEESE _ 20 grown Speckled, White Breasted, and few All White Guineas, $1.50 ea.; Will ship. pe Fred Atkinson, Valdosta, t. 4. 1 Turkey Hen, 9 Young Tur- key 10 weeks olds, all $30. E. H. Clarke, Macon, 2560 Bloomfield Dr. ; - 1953 hatch Mallard Ducks, $4. Be: Also Dark Cornish. Ban- tams, $1.50. ea,;. $3: pr. . L. Cawthon, Riverdale, Jonesboro 2592. White Beltsville Turkeys, 3 toms, 3 hens, $20. pr. No ehks. Mrs. Ruby Davis, Pelham, Rt. 1, Box 108. Chukar ~ Partridge breeder, large, excellent plumage, $3.50 ea.;, 12 or more, $3. ea.; North- ern Bob White Quail, "$5. pr.; r lard Ducklings, $1. ea. FOB. C. D. Ward, Atlanta, 800 Peach- 4710; Home Marietta 9-6986. 2. large grey ganders, cross breed, $5. ea.; $10. pr.; White / Pekin and Indian Runner Cross Ducks, $2.50; Drakes, $3. Mrs. ae F. Gaddis, Quitman, Box 124, : Some Muscovy Ducks for 17 large ducks, 1953 hatch, $3. pr. Exch.2 prs. for 1 pait geese. Ea. pay postage. Mrs. Mary Towe, Young Cane. - White Beltsville Turkeys, 3 2 fine 4 A White Wyandotte Roosters, $2.50 ea.;5 Hens, $2.25 sg Mrs, Ethel Jones, Lula, Rt. 2 doz. AAAA purebred White Wyandotte Pullets, 3 mos. old, Pine Grove Rd. Phone 4673. Two 1 yr. old purebred RCSL Wyondotte Cocks, $2. 50 ea. Do- cia Harris, Lula. 525 Harco RI Reds and Hub- bard N. H. Hens, Mar, 1953 hatch, laying 70 pct., $2. ea. for lot. Re Turner, Waverly Hall, 25 Jan. hatch RI Pullets, lay~ (25 only mixed Bantams, ler, Atlanta, 466 Page Ave., N. : 1846, 1004A ~ NH Pullets, 11 mos. old, Carters Champ., laying, $2. 50 ea, T. C. Echols, Atlanta, Blue Ribbon Winners at SE Fair, AAAA grade, productive or Parmenter Red Pullets, Mar. 1953 hatch, laying, $3. ea. at home, or shipped in light ders, Vienna. 10 NH Red Pullets, 4 mos. old, $1.60 ea. Mrs. J. F. Travick, Tennille, 6 N. H. Red hens, good lay- re _ POULTRY WANTED Domesticated Greenhead Mal-: 'Welch Ponies. POULTRY WANTED. GEESE: Want pair of Gi Advise price shipped FOB Exp. office a Camilla. H. io Thigpen, New- Oe. Po gander, at reasonable price, del. Advise. M. M. Minor; pen 1067 Canton St. NZReds, reg. does and bucks; Calif. Young does, will breed to reg. buck; a few nice bucks ready for service. S. A. Slade, Vienna. 4 Chinchilla. Doe rabbit also Red Buck and Doe, 1 yr. old, $3.00 ea.; $8.00 for lot. Write. Mrs. F. A. Park, Alma, Rt. 2. BRAHMAS (LIGHT): Want 3 Light Brahma pullets. Advise. J. C. Ogletree, Barnesville. 457 Forsyth St. GEESE: gander for another gander of Want exch. | brown Chinese same value. F. Wellborn, Rock Spring. F REDS: ~ Want few 4-A N. H. Red pul- lets, from good laying strain. State what you have and price del. to me. Mrs. J. Morris, Moultrie, Rt, 1. SHEEP AND GOATS FOR SALE 3 fine young milk goats, good milk stock,-to freshen next few weeks for sale. Dont. write or phone. Come see. W. M. Bar- ner, D.D.S., Columbus, 641 Ben- ning Dr . Fresh milk goat, with 2 baby goats, freshened Jan. 16, from. heavy~milker. Reasonable price. ao R: P: McCollum, Toccoa, Reg. Saanan Buck at a fee $5.00: Does boarded until bred, | young short hair; Hornless Nu- bian Doe, bred, and Bangs tested, $20.00. Won't ship. W. J. Sumlin, ane 730 Grand Ave. N. W. BE. 393. Large Billy Goat, very gentle, for sale. James Schinell, Atlanta, 2677 Pharr Rd.-N. E. Cr. 4390. _ Ewes with lambs at side bred yearling ewes and reg rams. Sell or trade for corn or legume hay. R. B. Curtis, Farmington. Call Madison 2603. LIVESTOCK WANTED Cattle: Want reg. Polled Hereford Male, about 1 yr. old. Nearby Mrs. S. A. Phillips, Palmetto, Rt. 1. Phone 5153. Want vend Angus, Hereford, or Shorthorn Cows (bred) not over 5 yrs. old, Bangs and TB tested, no culls, Pay top beef price. Harry Johnson, Silver Creek. HOGS: Want I or 2 Little Bone Guinea Pigs, 6 or 8 wks. old State price. ue ulie Santom, Dalton, Stanley Want White Face Hereford _|Hog, bred gilt, or pair or un- related pigs. Letters ans. Char- lie H. Young Chatsworth, Rt. 3, Box ie EG: Want 1 reg. SPC 8-15 mos. old. Write or call giving age and weight. A, J. Durden, Fayette- ville, Rt. 3. Phone 3184, HORSES AND MULES: Want 2 gentle Shetland or Also 1 gentle Mexican Burro. Advise price, complete details in Ist letter. oon E. Blizzard, Jr, Cor- ele Want to exchange good pert mare mule, approx. 950 lbs., 15-20 yrs. old for slow, good dependable farm horse, or mules if horse not available. R. P. Bo- mar, Palmetto. . Want Ist. class farm mule. Ju- lian Britt, Decatur, RFD 3. Tel. | De. 9616 after 6 PM. Want to buy a Palomino Mare, ed or unbred, very gentle. alee Dickerson, pone ines Box _ Want 6 Embden geese and 1). Want good man for help on 2 H. farm. Lights in house. School and church near. B. F. Grant, McDonough. P. O. Box 205. phone 3518. Want middleaged farm cou- ple white or col. for small farm. Light farm chores, work with flowers, ete. Both to work. 4 R. house, wired for elec. near school and. church and_trans- portation on good road. Pre- vailing wages. G. C. Slaughter, Decatur, Rt. 3. Want middleaged white or col. woman for daily farm chores on farm. Private room, lights, gas heat and reasonable salary. Exch. Ref. if desired. Mrs. B. M. Brown, Lyons. Kilk- are Plantation. - Want clean, honest, reliable white woman to live as one of family on farm and do light farm chores. Room, board and reasonable salary. Contact. Mrs. W. J. Scarborough, Jr., Tifton. Rt. 4. : Want good reliable colored man with foree enough to work small 2 H farm on halves. C. B. Huie, Forest Park, RFD No., 1, Box 175. Tel. Jonesboro 6781. Want settled farm couple to work on cattle and grain farm. Man must be experienced in driving and maintaining all types of farm machinery, in- cluding combining. Reply in writing. State previous and present employer and number of children or dependents. W. M. Nixon, Thomaston, c/o B &B Ranch. Tel. 2412. FARM HELP WANTED | FARM HELP WANTED Want reliable parties on 50-50 or standing rent basis fo good farms, 2-H. and 1 with 4 and 5 R. houses, on school and Mail Bus Rt. near Jonesboro. Contact or Alex H. Stephens,. Want reliable farmer for 1 H. farm in Gwinnett Co., on standing Rent basis only. Goo land, school bus Rt. good 5 house, Elec. plenty water. Con- tact. Mrs. W. A. Pate, Atlant. 1019 W. Peachtree St. N. z AT. 0613. Want exp. reliable truck farmer. No drinkers. White of Colored. Will share 50 Pct ~ Furnish 5 R. house, water, Elee, mule, tools and seed. Nea? good school and trucking cen ter. Exceptional proposition if can qualify. E. T. Brown, Avone dale Estates. phone EL 9190 ~ or (nights) De 1975. Want reliable white farmer with family able furnish self, on 50-50 badka. Good land, good settlement, nn mail and schoo} - bus Rt. Good pr. mules an plenty farming tools. 25 A. cul- tivation, 3 R. house, Spring in yard, plenty wood. 10 mi... Ellijay. Letters Ans.