Phil emia. Commissioner Bulletin ustrial rantketd ae seouu 1 production to minimizeor sliminate crop surpluses? ot = succeeded SO UL, ayant is eraink and the andards are rising, the productive ty of our agriculture promises for ars to keep increasingly ahead. s from raw materials such oleum, why not use crop es to Sling new and creed pro- iso? s aed many others. Coal in fact, are pa that nan boerdsen commission, ished y the 84th Congress, was as- roducts, thereby eliminating crop es and overproduction? The com- S ves the answer is an emphatic WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1957 enn in END SURPLUSES NUMBER 49 of making recommenda- | Agpibalisral CALENDAR eae 17, Piomesuw Georgia Jer- sey Cattle Club Fall Sale. Aug. 19-22, Rock Eagle Park Second annual poultry institute. August 22, Tifton Small Grain and Winter Grazing Short Course. - August 27, Valdosta Georgia Duroc Breeders Show-Sale. August 30, Douglas Aberdeen Angus Association Consignment Sale. August 30, Georgia State Fair. Ground, Macon Georgia Breeders Associa- tion Annual Fall Sale. September 3, Tifton Water Manage- - ment Short Course. Sept. 4 Rock Eagle Park, Artificial Breeding Conference. September 5, Tifton Steer aecdes Short Course. September 10-11, Athens Agriculiural Cooperation Short Course September 13, Tifton Leafy Vegeta- ' bles Short Course. cottonseed, Light-Weight Wheat Under Price Support Requirements are being relaxed to in- _ clude lighter-weight wheat under the 1957 price-support program, according to gohn F. Bradley, state administrative of- fice, Georgia Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee. The program is being revised because wet weather in the Southwest at harvest time is resulting in a higher percentage of light-test wheat than usual. The light-weight wheat included un- der the relaxed provisions of the 1957 program will be Sample grade on test weight only, but no wheat testing less than 40 pounds per bushel will be eligible for support. Previously, price support was limited to wheat grading No. 3 or better, or No. 4 or No. 5 no test weight only. Loans Are Available For Farm Storage Farmers who are in need of more farm storage space often overlook the storage facility loan, according to John F. Bradley, state administrative officer of the Agricultural Stabilization and Con- ~ servation Committee, nee Storage facility loans are made avail- able by Commodity Credit Corporation to help farmers add to their farm storage space. Owner operators, share tenants, share landlords, or producer partnerships are eligible for the loans. The loans are available through local : banks or directly from the Commodity | Credit Corporation. Applications can be made at the local ASC office. The loan can be paid off over a four-year period which | begins on the first anniversary of the loan. Interest is at four percent per year. The storage structure to be bought or built by a farmer and on which a loan is made must meet the requirements for storage under the price-support program. Structures for the storage of wheat, corn, oats, rye, barley, soybeans, peanuts, grams. More Milk Produced By Soilage Feeding Soilage-fed cows out-produce pas- ture-fed cows, according to the Rhode Is- land Agricultural Experiment Station. Soilage (not silage) is a method of bringing the pasture to the cow instead of taking the cow to pasture. In 3 tests periods, 12 to 13 pairs of milking cows were used. The cows on soilage cut-produced the ones on pasture by 1153 pounds of milk per acre 3945 compared to 2792 pounds. Only 0.84 acre was required for soil- age-fed cows during the feeding period, while the cows on pasture needed At acres or 31 percent more pasture to pro- duce less milk than the soilage fed cows. [ OF THE SOUTH Ss OF THE MISSISSIPPI Georgia, First: PEANUTS BROILERS FOREST LANDS NAVAL STORES PIMENTO PEPPER 1 * IMPROVED PECANS flaxseed, and winter cover crop seeds are eligible under the pro- - Ee AE i OR a eae ak eee) | al rien a ae Dt Li a ai Me Cae et: PAGE TWO MARKET BULLETIN _ GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN Editorial and Executive Offices Staite Agriculture Building 19 Hunter Street, S.W. Atlanta 3, Georgia Phone JAckson 4-3292 ATIONAL EDITORIAL 6 MIETAB ER PHIL CAMPBELL the law to misrepresent any Notices of farm produce and appurtenances admissable under postage regulations in- serted one time on each re- quest. No notice or advertisement will be accepted from any commercial business, any commercial businessman, any company or organization li- censed as a commercial busi- ness or doing business under a trade name or_ business name, nor from any indivi- dual doing business under a trade name or commercial business name, The Georgia Market Bulle- tin assumes no respoi sibility for any notice appearmg in the Bulletin nor for any ransaction resulting from published notices. Advertisers are cautioned that it is against any product offered for sale in @ publie notice or adver- tisement carried in any pub- lication that is delivered through the United States mail. Editor MARKET BULLETIN STAFF Jack Gilchrist Notices . Circulation . Mailing Room Supt. Address requests to be MANAGER, Market Bulletin. NOTICES, Market Bulletin. class matter Aug. 1 under Act of June 1917. Assistant Editor 2 Address all complaints to EDITOR, Market Bulletin. mailing list, changes of address, etc., address must include OLD and NEW addresses. Address all notices and advertisements to EDITOR OF - Published weekly at 114-122 Pace St. Covington, Ga., by Georgia Department of Agriculture. Entered as second I 1937, at post office, Covington, Ga., 1900. Accepted for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act of Oct. 8, Bet et ee _ Tom MeMullan _. Mrs. Elizabeth Hynds Mrs. LaMyra Jarman __..__ Candler Clement Jr. added to or removed from to CIRCULATION All requests for changes of FARM WORK WANTED Want job on dairy farm. 3 yrs. exp. in G. IL. training. 38 yrs. old, wife and 3 children, ages 7 and 2 yrs., and 9 mos. old. Need 3 or 4 R. house. Do not drink and willing worker. Charlie Stroup, 840 Third St. hn Atlanta 18. Ph TR 4- Want job on farm. Operate tractor or truck or anykind farm machinery. Have children and wife. Want place near Fulton or Cobb Co. Work for day wages. Am 34 yrs. old Tommie Lee Spears, 670 ees St. S.W., Atlanta Man, 29 yrs. old wants job looking after laying hens on farm. 1-1/2 yrs. exp. as flock manager. Consider Dairy work. 3 yrs. exp. dairying. Need at least 4 R. house. Can move any time. Ref. if needed. Alvin Millholland, Rt. 1, Gray- son. Want farm, 10 or 15 acres with good house, good water and lights, and chicken houses; mear school Rt. Weekly sal- ary. Do not drink or other bad habits. Wife and 7 child- ren, Write. Bud Simmons, Rt. 2, Alto. Middleaged white man wants job as Caretaker, rais- ixg chickens and hogs with] jz good people. Salary just a secondary object. Thos. R. Welch, Rt. 3, Cuthbert. Want job on farm. Have wife and 11 children, one boy 17 yrs. old. Ready to move. Need 4 or 5 R. house. M. C. Clark, Rt. 2 Glenwood. Want job raising chickens for part, or by the week; or job milking cows, or both. Can drive any kind of tractor or truck. G. L. Hardeman, Craw- ford. Want 1 H. farm with 4 or 5 R. house, lights and water, near school, for standing rent, within 20 mi. Atlanta. C. T. Mitchell, 3910 Lawrenceville Rd, Decatur. Single, retired, white man wants job as Caretaker, poul- try, hogs, cattle, gardening. and yard work, for room, board and salary. Exp. Would 7|patch. G. C. Henry, 1203 Hou- ston St., LaGrange. Want any kind light farm work on farm, with good, christian people. 55 yrs. old, good health and record. No bad habits. Want some rooms to put my things in. Live 1 mi. Union Hill Methodist church. Write or see. Mrs. R. H. Treadwell, Rt. 1, Box 264, Bremen, White, married, 25 yr. old man wents job on cattle or poultry farm. Thoroughly exp. with poultry and cattle. Can drive and operate all types farm machinery. Honest, so- ber and reliable. All offers considered. S. J. Whitfield, Rt. 1, Hoschton. _39 yr. old man, white, single, sober, honest, want job as farm helper. 10 yrs. exp. Can drive tractor. Room, board and laundry and $15.00 week. . M. Reed, c/o R. W. Mer- ritt; Rt. 2; Cairo. Married man wants job on farm. Exp. farming, also hogs, cattle, etc. 4 children, oldest 14. No bad habits. Can move any time. Beckham Wilson, Rt. 1, Box 442, Jonesboro. Want job on farm for bal- ance of 1957 and for 1958. Hard worker, honest, reliable, sober 27 yrs.._ old, le. Want work and home th ood Go anywhere. 2ople. ohn Harold Whitten, Rt. 1, c/o J. R. Whitten, Senoia. Man and wife want job on farm, raising chickens, in No. Ga. Have to be moved. Week- ly wages. E. M. Southerland, Rt. 3, Ellijay. FARM HELP Want 40 to 60 yr. old white, christian woman to do light farm work on farm. Claud W. |Johnson, Rt. 2, Conyers. Want farm Jabor for work on So. Ga. farm. 30-50 yrs. old, with small family. Pay $4.50 day with raise to $5.50 after 90 days if satisfactory. Write. George Varn, Box 205, Folkston. Want at once, exp. Dairy- man. Good salary, mod. 4 R. house, bath, lights. Bonus af- ter 12 mos. Must be sober jand dependable and know how to drive tractor and_ truck. Ref. required. W. O. Under- wood, Rt. 2, Summerville. Phone 2174 Pemmville. Want young man with fam- ily on a share crop and part time word, or straight salary for 1958. Must have exp. In tractors and equipment. Good house with lights, water and on school bus Rt. Earl Man- sell, Rt. 1, Roswell. Fulton Co. Want man and wife to live on and operate small Beef Cattle farm. House to live in, wired, and on paved Hwy. Light work and year around job. A. C. Tyler, RFD 1, Jul- iette. Want farm family for 1958. Must be well exp., and willing workers, 50-50 basis. 5 R. house, Elec., mail and school route. Would furnish some day work. Can move now and help gather this yrs _ crop. John A. Wilson, Rt. 2 Martin. Want clean, quiet, healthy christian woman, no bad ha- bits. to do light farm work on farm, and live in home with elderly woman and _ room, board and salary .Miss Ar- delle Segler, P.O. Box 1814. Ochlocknee. Ph. 61. SALE EVENTS August 30 (Friday) An- nual Fall Sale of the Georgia Guernsey Breeders Associa- tion at Georgia State Fair Ground, Macon .. . 45 head, about 40 cows and heifers fresh or due to freshen soon after sale date, have been consigned. EQUIPMENT FOR SALE Two 3 row grain drills, 1 new and the other used only twice, for sale; also Want 1 planer knife sharpener in good cond., no junk, E. M. Landrum, Adairsville. Peanut Combine, good run- ning cond., last season, $500, or trade for Ferguson rake. W. C. Cornwell, Rt. 2, Americus, Ph; 7558: Complete chicken dressing outfit, picking machine, dunk ing machine and 60 gal. gas. scalding tank, good cond. $300 for outfit. Quill Jordan, 219 Hayes St. Toccoa. Minn. Moline automatic grand and fertilizer drill, 16 disc, also Sears all metal 1 H. wagon, 4 good 600 x 16 tires, mule and plows, for sale. L. P. Singleton, Fort Valley, Ph. TA 5-5940. 1 H. wagon, in good cond., $45 my place, 2 mi. Scarboro. Mrs. Thomas S. Herrington, Rt. 1, Box 199, Rocky Ford. One used cotton picker (stripper type), used last sea- son, $500 or highest bidder. Can be seen my farm, 3 mi. No. Milledgeville near Lake Sinclair dam. Apply at Log Cabin, _ Crossroads. Longino Little, Box 57, Milledgeville. Ph. 9281. re)