Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1961 April 12

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ap, Farmers

Commissioner






































ly, Crops Research Division, Ag-
ultural Research Service, U. S.
vartmeni of Agriculture and Uni-
' of Georgia, College of Agri-

millet is the most productive
r annual forage grass in much of
utheastern United States. K. R.
and H. A. Fribourg, Tennessee
Itural Experiment Station, Knox-
Tennessee, found that Gahi-1 pearl
produced over 50 percent more for-

Pp
sic acid glucoside present in su-
rad sorghum varieties. It is drought-
ant and is adapted to a wide range
types. Agronomically, pearl millet,
ularly Gahi-1 and Starr, are tops

an be tops for milk and meat pro-
in also. As with any other forage, if
erly managed, they may give very
unimal performance. ce
oper management involves the use
inting, fertilization, and grazing or
sting methods that will give at the
d time the maximum yield of the
of forage required to produce meat
k. This statement indicates that pro-
danagement is neither simple nor
Maximum dry-matter yields are

1g or silage stage. If grazing is de-

of management will also make too
grazing for a few days and leave
0 follow later in the season.

ice millet is grown to produce
or milk, any discussion on manage-
should begin with a consideration
at the animal needs for these pur-
Many dairymen who produce milk
iss would be quick to say that young
contains the most milk. Limited
ch and experience with Gahi-1 and
millet confirm this statement.
} Srass contains more protein than

Georgia
EMPIRE STATE OF THE |
hs

SOUTH



ian Piper sudan, best sudangrass in ~

old grass, Hoveland and McCloud, Florida

immer grazing. If managed right,

ied when millet is cut at the early-_

until this stage, however, animals
efuse to eat much of the crop. This



ATLANTA, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1961

NUMBER 32

Tips On Controlling
~Rancidity In Milk



Agricultural

CALENDAR

April 18 Georgia Dairy Association, 25th
annual meeting. Atlanta.

May 7 + 14 Soil Stewardship Week in
Georgia.



May 6 = 7 Dixie Classic Fancy Poultry
Show, Lakewood Park, Aflanta



May 16 Beef Cattle Field Day, Georgia
: Experiment Station, Experiment.

May 27 Georgia Quarter Horse Assn.,
third annual show. Veterans



Memorial State Park, Cordele.





Agricultural Experiment Station, Gain-
esville, Florida, found that young millet,
grazed when 18 inches tall, contained
24.9 percent protein whereas older millet
harvested when 54 inches tall contained
only 16.2 percent protein. Young grass
also contains in a highly digestible state
the nutrients required for milk produc-

_ tion. In addition, the young grass is suc-

culent and palatable enough that the cow
will eat the large quantities needed for
high yields of milk. Thus, for milk pro-

duction, millet must be managed so as to

Continued On Page 7)

NOTICE ON TAXES

Some farmers still do not realize that
social security taxes are not optional. The
law requires all farmers who clear $400
or more to make a federal income tax re-
turn and report their profit for social se-
curity.

This report must be made if you clear
$400 or more and an income tax return filed
even though you do not have to pay any
income tax. ~

Social security taxes must be paid if
you paid a hired hand $150 cash wages
during the year. The worker who Is paid
by the hour, day, week, or month must also
have his wages reported if he worked 20
days during the year.

For full information see your Internal
revenue office or the social security office.
if there is no such office In your town.









check at the local post office.



F THE MISSISSIPPI

By J. J. SHEURING
Professor of Dairying
University of Georgia

With the advent of stanchion and par-
lor pipelines and the use of the farm tanks

in the production of milk, some problems

due to rancidity have become more pro-
nounced during the past few years.
Although some dairy plants. and
farms do not seem to have too much of a
problem with rancidity for several
months, it may flare up rather quickly
and cause some serious flavor problems.
There is no known method of remov-
ing the rancid flavor from milk once it
developes. Therefore, if milk is rancid
before pasteurization, it will still be ran-

cid after pasteurization. IT MUST BE

PREVENTED FROM DEVELOPING BE-
FORE THE MILK IS PASTEURIZED
AND BOTTLED.

There are certain steps that should be
taken by a producer who is having trou-
ble with rancid milk:

1. Check individual cows to see if
there are any producing rancid
milk. Be especially careful of cows
in the early and late stages of lac-
tation.

2. Avoid movement and _ shaking of

milk as much as possible, especial-
ly if the milk is warm. In practice,
when using pipeline milkers, risers
in the line should be eliminated if
possible. By a riser, we mean any
situation where milk must be
forced straight up in the pipeline
system.

3. Cool the milk as rapidly as possi-
ble with a minimum of agitation.

4. If warm milk is added to cold milk,
be sure that cooling takes place al-
most immediately. Warming cold
milk by this method plus an in-
crease in agitation of the supply will
favor rancidity development.

5. Be sure to keep milk that is pro-
duced by cows having mastitis
from the bulk supply.

6. Be especially careful during the
months when dry feed is being
used.

In order to understand the causes of

(Continued On Page 7)

Ceergia, First:

e @ BROILERS @ PROTECTED FOREST LANDS @ PIMENTO PEPPER

@ PEANUTS @ IMPROVED PECANS

@ NAVAL STORES









a



ee a



PAGE TWO

GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN|

State Agriculture Building
Editorial and Executive Offices
19 Hunter Siree?, S. W.
Ailania 3, Georgia
Phone JAckson 4-3292

| NATIONAL EDITORIAL
1 SA assoch. 11
Bee | [ASP

(Malan see nen aned so




PHIL CAMPBELL

Editor





MARKET BULLETIN STAFF





Notices of farm produce
and appurtenances admissible
under postage regulations in-
serted one time on each re-
quest.

No notice or advertisement
will be accepted from any
commercial business, a0 Y
commercial businessman, any
company oF 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 eommercial
business name.

The Georgia Market Bulle-
tin assumes no responsibility
for any notice appearing in
the Bulletin nor for any
transaction resulting from
published notices. Advertisers
are cautioned that it is against
the law to misrepresent
any product offered for sale
in a public notice or adver-

lication that is
through the United States
mail.

Jack Gilchrist



Assistant Editor
Notices
Circulation

Mailing Room Supt.

by Georgia Department of

1917.

Address
mailing list, changes
MANAGER. Market

requests to be







Published weekly at 114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.,
Agriculture. Entered as second
class matter Aug. 1, 1937, at post office, f
under Act of June 6, 1900. Accepted for mailing at specia.
rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act of Oct. 8,

of address, etc., to
Bulletin, Atlanta. All requests for
change of address must include OLD and NEW addresses.

Address all complaints to EDITOR, Market Bulletin.

Address all notices and advertisements to EDITOR OF
NOTICES, Market Bulletin, Atlanta.

Deborah Anglin
Mrs. Elizabeth Hynds
Mrs, LaMyra Jarman
Candler Clement Jr.

Covington, Ga.

added to or removed from
CIRCULATION

MARKET BULLETIN







~ Farm

Work

WANTED

White, christian married
man, 61 yrs. old, in good
health, wants job on chicken
or any type farm work. Want
work immediately. J.
Swallows, 883 Cherokee Ave.,
S. E., Apt: 13, Atlanta 15.

Single, white man, 42 yrs.
old, wants job on dairy farm.
20 yrs. exp. No bad_habits.
Steady worker. Carl Garmon,
1353 Lucile Ave., S. W., At-
janta 10. Ph. PL 3-4844.

Want job raising broilers,

10,000 cap. or more, also
ood 4 or 5 R. house to live
i wood and water, near

church, school, good_ settle-
ment, mail by door. Not able
do heavy work. Wife also
help and 1 son work when
school is out. Need job at
once. Have to be moved, any-
where in No. Ga. W. G. Leon-
ard, Rt. 1, Lawrenceville.



White man with wife, 3
children want job on chicken
farm. Need 5 R. house wired
for stove. Start work immedi-
Mek Reasonable salary. C.
Cc. Cannon, P. O. Box 381, El-
berton.



Large family wants job on
farm. 3 sons, 15, 25 and 27
yrs. old and myself to work.
Can drive tractor and truck.

_ Honest, sober, willing to work.
Ready to be moved. Mrs.
Celesta Parker, Douglasville.

Wife, husband and 4 girls
want job on chicken farm, for
weekly wages, and house to

live in. Want near or by

school bus, 2 of girls go to
school; the other 2 help with
work. Mrs. Hollis Blackwell,
Rt. 1, Dawsonville.





Woman, 38 yrs. old, wants
work on farm, housekeeper
. and light farm work. Write.
Miss Audrey May, Berlin.

White married man, 1 child,
wants job on chicken farm.
Sober, honest,
ience, dependable and can
furnish Ref. Need 3-5 R.
house. Wife, father, mother-
in-law and sister to help with
work, but will take job with-
out inlaws. Reasonable sal-
ary. Howard Mosley, 277 Lit-
tle St., S. E. Atlanta 15.



dren want job raising 10,000
to 40,000 chickens on halves,
or to be paid by the week.
Experienced. Write. Tom
Jones, Rt. 2, Cumming.



Man and wife want job
raising broilers on Halves,
with 4 R. house, wired_for
elec. stove. Both have Exp.
raising broilers. Prefer in Ma-
rietta area. Must be moved at
once. Letters ans. Mrs. Grace
Fluery, Rt. 5, Canton.

20 yr. old, single, farm
raised young man wants job
on So. Ga. farm. Can drive
tractor and truck, and other
farm machinery. Want room,
board and reasonable salary.
Lee Dean, c/o W. W. Thomp-
son, Rt. 1, Grantville.





Want job training horses
for horse farmer, or party in-
terested in raising horses.

Exp. breaking and training
thoroughbreds also Western
horses. Reasonable salary. Ref.
furnished. Prefer near At-
lanta. Ernest Baker, Rt. 8,
Stone Mountain, Ph, HI 3-
6708.

White, married man, 39
yrs. old, 3 children, 1-3 yrs.,
wants job on farm. Plenty ex-
perience, born and raised on
farm. Wages or share basis.
Need 4 R. house. Have to be
moved. Cecil B. Turner, 186
Hurt St.. N: E., Apt. 6, At-





lanta 7.

Young couple with 4 chil-.

Farm Help

WANTED



Want someone to do farm
work near Roswell. Contact.
Fred Chatham, Rt. 1, Roswell.

Want single, older man,
white or colored, not an al-

coholic to live 8 mi. Augusta.)

Primary duty take care of
several horses and do yard
and some light farm work
for place stay and salary. Pre-
fer single, but consider cou-
ple without children. Thom-
as J. Howard, MD, 505-8
Southern Finance Bldg. Au-
gusta.

Want man dependable, so-
ber immediately to work on
cotton farm. Exp with Farm-
all and AC tractor. Prefer
man and wife. Have 4 R.
house, wired for electric
stove. Boyce Stone, Rt. 2,
Calhoun. Ph. MA 9-5360 (No
collect calls).

Want white unencumbered
woman to live in and work
on small poultry farm. Pri-
vate room and board with
small salary. Mrs. J. B. Couch,
111 Linda Dr. Rt. 5, Austell.
Ph. 948-9081.

Want nice woman at once
to live on farm as one of
family, and help with farm

work. Reasonable salary. No

objection to child. Letters
ans. Willie Lee Dunn, Rt. 1,
Box 146 A, Locust Grove.

Want reliable man and son
or 2 men to operate dairy, $4.
day each and house free. HE.
L. Johnson, Rt. 1, Crawford-
ville. Ph. OS 8-2504.

Want man _ and wife, no
children, to live with me on
farm and grow broilers. Must
be reliable and honest. Mrs.
C. H. Anderson, Rt. 1, Daw-
sonville.





Chrysanthemums, Desert
Quail, lavender, yellow cen-
ter, white Seagull, pure white
outer petals with cream cen-
ters, yellow Button type, pur-
ple Waters, Mum type, blooms
June until frost, $1.00 doz.
plus 25c postage; winter
blooming yell ow jasmine,

rooted, 50c ea. Per. 210. Damp

packed. Mrs. J. H. Barrow,

RFD 2, Waco.

Spider plants and, varie-
gated Spider plants, ea. kind,
4, $1.25; Pink Mullein, Bos-
ton Daisies, ea. 6, $1.25; 2 An-
gel Wing Begonias, $1255. 3,
Spotted Leaf Begonias, $1.25;
Golden plate Achillea, pink
rosebud Begonia, ea. 4, $1.25;
10 ten in. Ligustrum, $1.25.
Rooted. Per. 21. Mrs. Law-
rence McAvoy, Rt. 1, Box 323,
Washington.

150 named Daylilies and
Iris, Claar, Pink Petticoats,
$1.00 ea.; Red Velvet, Can-
yon Purple, Amburst, Tamara,
75c; Daafu, Prima Donna,
$1.50; Linda, Sylvia, Port,
Pink Charm, Comet, Sabal-
Jero, Sauchem, Soudan, Susan,
Tejus, Monte, 25c ea. 12, $2.50.
Postage, 40c. Per. 19. Mrs.
F,. M. Combs, Washington.

Philippine Lily seed, 50c C;
hundreds named Daylilies, ea.
dif. labeled, 12, $1.50; Snap-
dragons, mixed, 12, 50c; rose,
pink, yellow, white, 12 GoC;
Gerber Daisies, 25c ea.; 125
named Iris, not labeled, 12, $1.
Per, 150. 40c postage first
doz., 10c ea. added doz. Mrs.
M. P. Combs, Washington.

Am Dutch, Mead, Amaryl-
lis 2 yr. seedlings, cant_sep-
arate, $1.50 doz.; $6.00 C.; 10
col. large, incurved ref. Mums,
$1.00 doz. labeled, fine Can-
nas, Grand Operas, etc. (no
old common ones), 3, $1.35,
6, $2.25; 12, $3.50, labeled.
Per. No. 2. Mrs. C. H. Tan-
ner, 1807 Vinson Hwy., Mil-
ledgeville. :



Want elderly couple who
draw Social Security or Wel-

fare, to live in good farm
home and serve a: Caretaker
in exch, for good home on

paved Hwy. Mail, school bus
route and Rolling store. Good
proposition. Lawton Lynn,
Collins. :

Want at once, sober, reli-
able, honest man to do gen-
eral farm work, able handle
tractors, combine, corn shel-
lers and truck. Have big 3 R.
house, wired with electricity.
Add another room if needed.
eS Welch, Pinehurst. Ph.



some exper- | 21



Flowers



FOR SALE
Red Spider Lilies, white
Snowdrops, yellow Jonquils,

Sacred Jap Narcissus, dbl.
orange, tan variegated Day-
lilies, single orange striped
and lemon Daylilies, $1.00
doz., 6 doz. $5.00; Dutchess of
Windsor blue, long stem yard
Violets, Blue Michaelmas Dai-
sies, $1.00 doz. Add 50c pos-
tage per order. Per, 33. Mrs.
O, S. Fields, 407 No. Madison
St. Thomasville.

Maidenhair Ferns, 50c, 3
$1.35; Carvel Cacti cuttings,
20c, 5, $1.00. Per. 80. No chks.
Add 10c postage. Mrs. C. W.
Bradford, Star Rt. Tignall.

Seed: mix. col. dbl Zinnias,
Sweet Williams; novelty pep-
per, red, hardy Sweetpeas,
Queen Anns Lace, red Prince
Feathers, Feverfew, red, pink,
white Bachelor Buttons, red
Yarrow, dbl. Marigolds, 20c
tsp., PP; blue Spanish Iris and
Liriope, 50 doz. large plants.
PP. Per 84. Mrs. C. E. Leve-
rett, 2180 Ranchwood Dr., Rt.
3, Tucker. Ph. HI 3-4228.

Daylilies: Capri, Maid Mar-
ion, Tiny Jewels, Oklahoma,
$1.00; Colonial Dame, Flame
Tagot, Mamie Lake, Persian
Princess, Cabello, Bold Cour-
ier, Purple Waters, Linda, 50c
ea., $5.00 doz.; others, un-
labeled, 10, $1.00. Per. 20. Add
50c postage. Mrs. J. M. Grif-
fin, Rt. 1, Washington.

i Generous pkt. Rainbow col.
including white and green,
mixture Coleus seed, 50c pkt.
Mrs. Henry S. Walker, Rt. 2,











Box 359, Washington



Old fashioned Marble vine
seed, screen, wall climber,
white and green marbles from
mid - summer until frost.
seed, 10e and 25c pkts., or-
namental pepper, 25 pkt.;
kinds hardy flower seed mix-
ed, Sweet Peas, Lemon shrub,
Four OClocks, 25c. Send
stamped, addressed envelope.
Per, 177. Mrs. M. E. Rhodes,
Rt. 2, Ranger.

Dbl. red, rose Geraniums,
dbl. pink, red, and red, pink,
single everblooming Begonias,
pink, white, Hydrangea, Xmas
and Thanksgiving | Cactus,
Rain Lilly bulbs, 20c ea; red
Amaryllis bulbs, 35 ea.; rose
Thrift, $1.00 C; yellow, dbl.
dbl. Daffodils, white Narcis-
sus, 50c doz. Per. 143. Add
postage. Mrs. W. H. Rice, Rt.
1, Royston.

Tris, 50, $1.00; Jumbo Pan-
sy plants, two cents ea; Mc-
Donald Lilies, 25c ea.; 6 root-
ed Geraniums, $1.00; Cactus,
single red Begonias, 25 ea.;
orange, red Sultana cuttings,
20c ea; Geranium cuttings,
15c ea.; big, spotted leaf Be-
gonia cuttings, 25c ea. Ad d
postage. Per. 145. Mrs. Lester
Phillips, Rt. 1, Royston.

Thrift, rose, $1.00 C; white,
35e doz; white Iris, orange
Daylilies, mix. col, Mums, 50c
doz; Mix col. large Chrysan-
themums, 75c doz. Waxleaf
Ligustrum, 8, $1; white Eng.
Dogwood, pink Crape Myrtle,
white Bachelor Buttons, 25c
ea.; Weigelas, 20c ea. Del. Per.
16. Mrs. Leila Phillips, Rt. 1,
Royston.

Pink Thrift, 50c C; Narcis-
sus, King Alfred, dbl. Jon-
guils, Blue F all_ Daisies,
Gooseneck, Chrysanthemums,
mix., and Dogwood cuttings,
$1.00 C; Multiflora Rose,
white, blue Siberian Iris, le-
mon, orange Daylilies, Mont-
bretia, 5c ea. Jan. Jasmine,
Arborvitae, Scotchbroom, 15c
ea., 2, 25c. Add postage. Per.
14. Mrs. Ned Burrell, Ra-
bun Gap. 3 e





Jan. Jasmine, 10c ea.; dbl.
yellow Chrysanthemums, 5
ea; orange Daylilies, 10c ea.
3, 25; white, light blue Si-
berian Iris, 5 ea. 50c doz;
White, yellow center Narcis-
sus, 5c; Scotch Brooms 15c ea.
2, 25c; Red Hot Poker, 25c,
50c. Per. 78. Add postage. No



out-of-state. Mrs. R. G. Led-
ford, Rabun Gap :


























Per. Philos
dina, 3, $1.00; dk
red Geraniums, dbl, rec
gle red, single pink
and pointed speckled
Begonias, Sultanas (varieg
leaves), cuttings, 20c e:
79. Add _ postage.
Cromer, Rt. 1, Royston

Purple Violets, $1.25; Din
ple Iris, 25, $1.25; Bear Gray
50c to $1.00; wild B
Violets and wild Iris,
Per 169. Mrs. John
Ri. 2; Temple: >

Pin k Thrift, Goo
Narcissus, Daffodils, B
cuttings, one cent ea; 1
yellow mix. Iris, 5c ea
englow, Daylilies, lem
ies, blue, white Iris,
Daisies, Boxwood,
brooms, 15c - 25c.
Mrs. O. W. Martin,
Gap.

Cherokee Roses, Mtn
rels, Rhododendrons,
yellow Azaleas, Redbu
apple, Holly, Dogwoo
Pine, Polar, creek Her
all 2 - 3 ft. high, $2.7
Phlox varieties, D
blue Iris, Shasta Daisies
112. Mrs. Bonnie Aber
bie, Mineral Bluff.

Large Type Dahlia
almost any color, asst.,
doz.; variety or color
ed, labeled, $3.00 doz.; si
ed Monards, Horsemint
wine, pink, purple or
vender and almost white
$1.25 doz. bunches, co
jJabeled, $1.50 doz. bu

| postage. Per. 165. Mr,

rence Heaton, Mineral B

Dbl. Tuberose, $1.10
Achiemenese bulbs, 2
purple; 1 doz. blue, $
3 diffferent colored
menese bulbs free in
25c orders for Achime
pink Justicia plants,
Maidenhair fern, 60 ea
iwinkle, asst. seed, 1/
25c. Postpaid. Per. 40
Emma Dugger, Newt

Pink Oxalis, 2 clum
Pres. Red Cannas, $2.0
C; 10 col. Verbe
eol. Thrift, $1.00 do
C: pink Sweet Williams
low Asters, blue Iris, 1
lilies, blue Violets, asst.
santhemums, blue Agere
Four OClocks, Phlox, 2
$1.50; $4.00 C. Add pos
Per, 64. Mrs. Janie |
Grantville. :

All col. Chrysanthe
$1.00 doz; blue Iris, 40c
white and yellow Nare
and yellow Jonquil bulbs
doz. Add postage. P
Ethel Crowe, Rt. 2, G
ville.

Dbl. yellow Cannas, mij
color Fall Pinks, mix.
Phlox, yellow Jonquils,
Narcissi, mix, color
Larkspur, Burning Bush,
doz.; Mullein Pinks, 3-
50c; pink Thrift, 75c C. ro
sprigs, damp packed.
flowers with order. Add %
tage. No stamps or Chks.
119. Pairlee Rundles, Rt
Gainesville. a

300 Cinca Minor, $4.50 di
Thrift, mixed col. 50, $2
Liriope. $2.00 C.; Eng. Ivy;
$1.50; seedling Ligustrum)
C. Per. 140, Lois Wood
Greenville. 4

Old Eng. dwarf Boxwot
bushy, 4 - 6 in., $15.00)
Kurume Azaleas, 1 yr. p
10, $2.50; Pyrancantha,
var., 6 - 8 in, 12, $3.00;
lia Japonica, 10 - 15
$7.00, Per. 148. Mrs. B.
inson, Greenville.

Ligustrums, 2 - 3 ft., i
ry Laurels, white Per, Can}
tuft, dwarf blue Per. Ph
$1.50 doz., $7.50 C.; Eng. ])
Vinca Minor, Black, Red }
der, white Atamasco and
lilies, small Nandina, Dp
blue Thrift, blue Siberian
and Achimenes, $1.00 doz
C. Per. 139. Blanche V |

4]

ruff, Greenville.

Peonies: Edulus Supe
Silvery Pink, Queen Vict
flesh-white, strong divisi
ea. $1.50 PP; named and
beled Iris, Azure, Floresce
Morning Splendod, Dora :
ea. 1 doz. $3.50 PP; blue






















. lavender Per.
c ea; red rosebud
light pink. rooted,

en and Biddies,
plant, Coleus, 2, 35c.
Mrs. H. G. Aderhold,














anthemums, Incurves,
2, yellows, bronze, red,
se red, lavender, Dou-
ite, lavender, red, yel-
Daisies, yellow,
ed, Pom Pom, red,
ushions, red, Fuchsia,
oz; 5 doz. mixed, $3.2
70. Damp packed.
ostage. Mrs, Lillian
Rt. 2, Tallapoosa.

Blue Siberian Iris,
white and green Jew
25c doz; Plumbago,
tenes. tc PP; Magic
orange, pink, 5 $1.30;
ias, med. JAN gee decora-
4 col. mixture, $1.30;
englow and a Daisy
s, 2-doz. $1.30; Verbena,
Clocks, 50 le 50. Per.
tle Pace, Rt. 1, Tem-











































































hos, Philodendron, Ne-
Boston Ferns, 59c ea;
rooted, 3, 25c; un-
25c; Night Bloom-
areus, rooted, 3, 25 ea;
alias, pink and red, sing-
Ye ea. Sprengeria fern,
a; dwarf Cockscomb, and
Marigolds, 15, ae Add
e. Per. 107. E. L, How-
EDs Wabiion

iey Leaf Caladium Bulbs,

1 d= col... 0) In: OL

20ivo2= yellow Yar-
Gaillardia; red Bee-
Fever few, Viola, Lark-
Queen Anns Lace, 25
hrysanthemums, 25, $1.;
Dianthus, Artemisia, Lir-

Goldenglow,. Stock,
Sragons, 25, $1. 30. Per,
\dd 35c postage. Mrs. J.
ynes, Madison.

hrift, 50c C; dif. col.
Bearded Tris, 50 doz:
ood. cuttings, one cent
ooted, 3, 25c; pot Hy-
s, 4 col., 25c, 50c and
ght, dark blue Fall
s (Asters), Scotch-
. Altheas, lavender
steed OCia3ta20C.. ber 04.
Tom Harkins, Mountain

ie, white Siberian Iris,
aa Daisies, Narcissus,
ails, 25c doz; Butterfly
Almonds, red Woodbine,
ony Waterer, Spirea,
blooms, 25c-50c ea; old
med bush. type, dbl.
Roses, 50c; Privet hedge,
vent ea. Per. 55. Varilla
ierman, Mountain City.

ik Shasta Daisies, $1.

crimson and _ bronze
santhemums, 50c doz;
and yellow Daisy
3, 25 doz. Add postage;
ul col. Baby Zinnia, seed,
arge match boxful, Per.
No chks. Mrs. M. M. Kel-
Rt. 3, Lithonia.

ass green Evergreen








\lHenry M. Ford, P.
147, Lavonia.

0 Cypress Vine seed,

growing climber with
eed, green foliage, slend-
tle trumpet shaped red
irs, bloms all summer.
sp., and self addressed,
= envelope. Mrs. J. a

. Rt. 1, Box 222, Lizel-

O.




idenglow, sweet blue
ts, Mullein Pinks, Rag-
Robin, Daylilies, pink
w, Daisy type white and
yellow Chrysanthemums,
w, lavender, and mix.
ISOC, doz: white, pink,
is, 9 dif. Cacti cuttings
4d Coleus, 10c ea, Add
ge, Per. 138, Mrs. Ralph
ams eerie 1 Gawrence-




















re Pateies Chrysanthe-
plants, 12, $1.00; fine
tmas Chrysanthemums
with eae 6 order, Mrs. .

more American Box~



Commander blue, your choice,

s, 10 in. high, $5. C. Per.

Chrysanthemum plants, ready
for shipping April 15 through





large type Chrysanthemums,
$2.50 doz.: Summer blooming
Cushion Mums, $1.00 doz.

large type and Bronze ae
50c ea.; Dutch purple Iris, $1
doz.; hardy Orchid, 3, $1.00.
Del. Ga. No less $2. 00 order.
Per. 7. Mrs. Adell Williams,
Rt. 2, Ellijay.

Dahlia bulbs, giant size,
white, yellow, pink, red, Jer-
sey Beauty, Apricot, purple,
lavender - white. my selec-
tion, 13, $2.00. pink Hibiscus,
65c ea. Per, 255. Add postage.
Miss Mabel Mathis, Rt. 5, Box
57, Ellijay.

Eng. Boxwoods, about 2 ft.
high, and some about 1 ft.,
cheap at my place. Cant ship:
also Boxwood cuttings, $1.00
doz. and postage. Per. 224.
Mrs. Candy Holden, Rt. 5,
Box 73, Ellijay.

Mix col. Sweet William
flower seed, 25c tbls., and
selfaddresed, stamped enve-
lope. Mrs. Emory Goble, Rt.
3, Ellijay.

Lemon Lilies, Corn Cob
Cacti, Texas Blue Bonnet, 4,
90c; dbl. Rose of Sharon, pink,
white, orchid, old rose; red
Weigelia, white, pink, deep
red, yellow Red Quince bush,
Tulip tree, Judas tree, rose
Altheas, 50c-ea: red Flowering
Dogwood, $1. 25 ea. Add post-
age. Per. 93. Mrs. Presley
Fowler, Rt. 2, Ellijay.

Boxwoods, 25c to $3.00; 2
yr. well rooted, fast growing
American plants, $3.00 doz.
$20.00 C; 3 yr. plants, $4.50
doz. $30.00 C. Per. 233. Gov't
insp. Free del. PP or Exp.
Marvin E. West, Rt. 2, Sandy
Creek Rd. Fayetteville.

Dbl. Petunias, Sultanas, 6,
$1.00; dbl. Hollyhocks, dbl.
Gloriosa Daisies, pink, blue
Ageratum, $1.00 doz.; Straw
Flowers, Calendulas, yellow,
white, dbl. Feverfew, annual
Gypsophilia, 60c doz., Per. Be-
gonias, $1.00 ea.; salmon Ger-
aniums, 3, $1.00; pink red
Daisy Mums, 5c doz Per. 17,
Add postage. Mrs. H. H. Stal-
naker, Rt. 5, Elberton.

2 fine Boxwoods, 8 yrs, old
about 2 ft. high, $2.50 ea.;
plenty Thrift, 50c C; 500 for
$2.00; few Evergreens, 50c ea.
Add postage. Per. 128. F,
Seay, 3917 Panthersville Rd.
Rt. 2, Ellenwood.

Young English Boxwoods,
1-1/2 in. high, $2.00 doz.;
large size, 27 in, or more, $2
ea. M. M. Cochran, Rt. 5, Elli-
jay.

Dahlia bulbs, giant size,
blooms up to 10 in..dia., 18
or more dif. var., red, white,
yellow, pink, apricot, Blue-
bird blue, Jersey Beauty,
Wine, purple, var. rose, cream,
lav. white, yellow purple,

6, $1.25. My selection, 13, $2.
Per. 168. Add postage. M r s.
Dewey Ellis, Rt. 5, Box 58,
Ellijay.

Variegated strawberry bor-
der plant, 50c doz; Snow on
Mountain, Sweet Williams,
mix. Larkspur, pink Primros-
es, 35c doz. Kiss and I'll Tell,
Love and Tangle, Moss little
Fern, 25c bunch, pink Daisy,
50c doz; flower seed, Salvia,
Poppies, Larkspur. Add nost-
age. Lizzie Crawford, Elli-
jay.

Purple Lilac, 2-1/2 to 4 ft.,
50c - 75c ea.; Crabapple, 22

4-1/2 ft., 50e - $1.00 ea. Plus|

postage. Per. 266. Mrs. A. W.
Maples, Rt. 1, Box 97, Ball
Ground.

No, 1 Fancy Leaf Caladium
bulbs; red Exposition, white
Candidum, and pink Lord
Derby, 25c ea. PP. Jos. Aber-
nathy, Barnesville.

Geraniums, Fuchsia, Afri-
can Violets, Episcia, Pegonias,
Philodendron, Shrimp plant,
Peperomia. Lantana, Iberus,
Ferns, 25c ea. Aluminum
plant, Maranta, Coleus, Impa-

tients, Cacti, 15 ea. Per. 52.} 790.

$1.25 min. order. Mrs. B. J.
Cantrell, Blue Ridge.

High grade, prize winning



doz. PP mixed;

$4.00
t 1 he , whites, vyel-



20 purple Verbena, or 10
red Spider Lily, or dbl. Day-
lily, Pysostegia, 3 Tiger Lilies,
Butterfly bush, red Woodbine,
20 deep blue Violets, $1.00 ea.
$2.00 order PP. Per. 89. Mrs,
C. B. Robinson, Rt. 2, Bow-
don.

Royal Robe Violets, 20, $1;
Calif. purple (fragrant) Vio-
lets, 30, $1.00; Yarrow, pink
bloom, fern like foliage, 3
doz. $1.00; Colossal red Can-
nas, large blooms; $1.00.
Add 35c postage, No less $1
orders, Per. 75. Mrs. R. P.
Steinheimer, Brooks.

Per, Scarlet King Verbena,
well rooted, $5. C; Crape Myr-
tle, well branched, deep red,
white, purple, 18-24 in. $5.
doz; Violets, large, pure white,
long stems, fragrant, Royal

Robe, Calif. purple, blue
Whitt. = $4.77 Co Mrs. be Ee
Cousins, Greenville.

Booking orders for July

delivery on bulbs, sev. hun-
dred Lycoris (or Spider) Li-
lies, bloom in September, $1.
doz., $7.50 C. PP. Send no
money now. Per. 252. W. E.
Smith, 421 Arnold St. Hape-
ue Ph, PO 1-8276 (Atlan-
ta). ;

Boxwoods, 1-3-1/2 ft. in
dia. prices $1. to $5. ea. Sell
in lots. Dig any time. Per.
No. 58. Mrs. Lola E. Corn,
Rt. 1, Hiawassee.

Double Head Canna Lily
bulb, red and pink, 3, $1. W.
L. Stephens, Hawkinsville.

Brown-eyed Susan _ seed,
Shasta Daisies, large, med.,
Fairy Lily bulbs, white and
pink. Mrs. Effie Caldwell,
ae So. Dooly St., Hawkins-
ville.

100 not labeled Bearded
Tris, $6.; also, some Blue Rib-
bon winners, var. including
New Pink. Good color range.
Per. No. 1, Mrs. Marvin B.
Farrar, Jenkinsbure.

400 named var., Bearded
Iris, won 1st place in 1960.
A.LS. Show. Govt insp. Per.
24, Add postage on orders.
Mrs. W. J. Saunders, Jenkins-
burg.

iii sare Gre. White
Ball, Fuchsia, Silversheen,
Bronze, Orchid, White, Yel-
low Doty, pink, red, yellow
Buttons, Pink Quill, rose,
pink, red Daisy, mix. collec-
tion 25 plants, $2.25; Indian-
apolis white and pink, 3, 50C;
with col, min, order, $2.25.
Per. 57. Miss Ruth Under-
wood, Rt. 3, Conyers.

Begonias, 54c; Shrimp plant,
Chinese Jade, Justicia, Pray-
er plant, 50c; small Cacti,
dif. shapes 40c; blooming
Jews, red leaf, Giant, 30c
bunch; Ferns, 50c; catnip, 35c
bunch. Add postage. Per. Mrs.
Otis Mashburn, Cumming.

Large type Chrysanthe-
mums, Silver White, Golden
yellow, Smith pink, lavender,
bronze, Shirley Temple,
eream, cherry red, 25 plants,
$2.; all col. Button and Daisy
type, 20 plants, $1. Add 25c
postage. Per. 92. Mrs. R. L.
Silver, Rt. 5, Cuthbert.

$1.:

Daylilies, any 4 for
Queen of Gonzoles, Lyte,
Dress Rehearsal, Linda, Sou-
dan, Silver Scarf, Hony Red-
head, Purple Haze, Pink
Charm. J, T. Russell, Viking,
Eric, Jr., Russells Minuet,
Bold Courier; fine Iris, names
lost, 4, $1.; Liriope, 3 doz. Sle
35 postage, Per, 18. Mrs, W.
Johnson, Crawfordville.

Dahlias, large type, some
the very largest, purple, pink,
red, white, cream and yel-
low, some _of all colors, not
labeled, 1 Fred Springer, good
tubers, 10, $2. PP. Per. No.
10. Mrs. R. HL Whelchel, Rt.
3, Dawsonville.

Dwarf Cushion Mums, pink
with yellow center, grow 3
ft., around, 2 ft. across, $1.15
doz. Nierembergia plants Per,
border, $1.15 doz. No~ chks.
nor Sunday trade. Mrs. Lon
Ashworth, Rt. 1, Dacula. Per.








Chrysanthemums, Exhibi-
tion, Florist type (only the
finest), Disease free, H. E.
Kidder, Nightingale, Sandra
Gail, Indianapolis Pink, oth-
er fine varieties, Guar, sand
rooted, Moss packed, _ $2.20
doz. PP. Per. 118. Mrs. Burton

MARKET BULLETIN = =~
_ Dbl. orange Daylilies, 3, $1;|

Chrysanthemums, assorted
many .var., 50 plants, $1.50;
many dif. per. plants, 20 for
$1.00. PP. Free plants. Per,
28. Mrs. W. S. Griffin, Rt. 1,
Adel.

Strong well rooted, giant
Adm, Byrd Daisy plants,
blooms up to 5 in., dia., $1.50
doz: + 25,5$2:50; $7. Cc: dbl.
white Spice Pinks, $1. 75 doz;
lavender Stokesias, $1.50 doz;
lavender Monarde and Bee
Balm), small clump, $1.75 doz.
Per ke PP in* Ga. State
insp. Mrs. O. S. Scarbrough,
2869 Church St. East Point.

Feverfew and Rain Lilies,
ea. $1. doz., Sev. col. Dayli-
lies, $1.50 doz: sev. col. Gla-
dioli bulbs, 90 doz: pepper-
mint, 90c doz. Add postage.
Per, 147. Mary Tumlin, East-
anollee.

Arborvitae, Nandina, 5 dif.
Spireas, Flowering Quince,
Jan. Jasmine, Elaegnus, For-
sythia, Wisteria, white. pink,
yellow climbing Roses, other
that can set through April.
Cant ship. All cheap price.
Per. 227. Mrs. C. H. Ward, Rt.
1, Adairsville.

Rooted MHollyhock, red
white, rose pink and other
col. $1.25 doz. plants. Per. 66.
nee J. M. McGuire, - Adairs-
ville.



PAGE THREE

Zennia

Red Ridinghood
seed, 5c pkt. Add postage.
Mrs. Ruby Logan, Rt. 1,
Douglasville. :
Daylilies, 160 var,, Artists
Delight, Louisiana Spring~

time, $10.00; War Eagle, White
Dove, Shining Rainbow, $7.50;
Beloved John, Cadillac, Play-
boy, $5.00; Midget Marvel,
Evelyn Claar, Mable Fuller,
Ming, 75c; Red Star, Fulva
Rosea, Purple Waters, Mickey
Mouse, Oneita, 20c. Add post-
age, Per. 101. Walter M: Jacke
son, 1123 Vickers St. S. E. At-
Janta 16.

Lady of Lake, 35c doz;
mixed mums, 40c doz;
white Easter Rose, pink Ox-
alis, 2 nice clumps, $1.00: Sul-
tanas, orange and purple, 35c
ea. rooted, orange and laven-
der Verbena, 65 doz; Bells
of Ireland, 50c doz.; annual -
Phlox , two cents ea. Per, 33,
Add 33c postage ist. Ib. Mrs.
Bryan Standridge, Abbeville.

Thrift, Dixie Brilliant, vivid

pink, blue, other col. large
bunches, $1.00 ea., or 8 nice,
rooted divisions, $1.00; and

four cents for stolens, cpreads
of old fashioned varieties, $1
and less, clearance in original
garden at cost. PP on large or=
aoe Per. 97 Mrs. Z. D. Dodd,



Rt. 1, Box 223, Alpharetta,





27c retail price).

Class 1 Wilk Price
Formula, April, 1961

The formula basis of pricing milk in Georgia as adopt-
ed by tne Georgia Milk Commission and released April 1,
1961 by economists at the Georgia Experiment Station in-
dicated an index of 27.1007.
crease over Febroury 1961 (27.0680) but not sufficient to
change the retail price (bracket 26.5001 - 27.4999 ae

This slight increase was not sufficient to cause ai |
change in milk prices for the months of May and June.

This represents a slight in-







Georgia.

years of age.



CHILD
ADOPTION

Do you want to adopt a child? Application should be
made at your local County Department of Public Welfare,
or you may write: Child Welfare Section, State Depart
ment of Public Welfare, State Office Building, Atlanta 3,

Couples applying to adopt infants must be under 38

Homes are especially needed for school-age children,
family groups of children, children with handicaps, and
negro children. In these cases, applications are accepted
from couples over 38 years of age.



































UKE














AS THE TREES GROW,
THE MARKET FOR
PULPWOOD BRINGS AN





0.|J. Wilber, 1006 Adams St, De-
catur, Ph. DR 3-680:






of cS t
LINGS WERE PLANTED IN

A THE SOUTH LAST YEAR BY }

i rt

EARLY RETURN FROM Tanne AND IMPROVEMENT CUTTINGS. c

Y Sin ib

ONE THOUSAND SEEDLINGS

THIS COST ONLY A8OUT

$4.00 INTHE SOUTH ~ A
SMALL INVESTMENT FOR
* A GREAT RETURN/





















S BILLION PINE SEED- :

SMALL PRIVATE CANDO NEEE.









PAGE FOUR



Flowers

FOR SALE



Perennials, separated or
mixed, $1 doz; Physostegia,
Monarda, Feverfew, Gypso.,
pink Phlox, Pink Thrift, Sweet
William, blue scented Violets,
Liriope, 12 mix. Col. Daisy
Mums, Goldenglow, blue As-
ters, dbl. Daylilies. Per. els
Mrs. Jesse Jackson, Rt. 2, Hill-
erest Dr. Austell.

Star Bethlehem bulbs, 40c
doz; ground Ivy, 60e doz;hardy
Phlox, asst. col., $1.00 doz.;
Boxwood cuttings, not rooted,
and Althea bushes, 6-10 in. $1
doz; Eng. Dogwood, small, 4,

$1.00 PP; 4 large Boxwoods
- at my home, $15.00 ea. Per.

06. Mrs. Ed Stone, Rt. 2, Box
105, Adairville.

Azalea Mums, r e d, white,
bronze, lavender, yellow, Fafl

Ba lavender, bronze, white



all, Lavender Button, 6, Sis
ight and dark pink Phlox,
pee or Crowfoot,
earl Flower, 10, $1.00; pink
creeping Phlox, 25c to $1.00;
lumps pink Weigela, Dusty,
0c ea. At my home. Add post-
ge. Per 102. Mrs. Susan Zig-
fn, 1566 Elleby St., S. E. At-
Janta 15. Ph. MA 7-5759..

Everblooming Begonias,
red, pink, rooted plants, mix.
ol. tall growing Iris, large
ums, red, white, yellow,
orange, ,Cushion Mums
yellow, pink, bronze

age. Per. 110. Mrs. C. C. Gen-.

try. Rt. 3, Calhoun.

Azalea type large, also Fall
srowing, large bloomers
ums, white, red, variegated
yed and yellow, 6 plants, $1.;
frican Violet leaves, 12, $1.;







ardy Phlox, 10 plants, Sie
Coleus, 15-20e ea; Ruffle
Rose col. Petunias, 15 ea.

Add postage. No order less
$1. Per.-132. Mrs. Marguerite
Bryans, 1255 Woodland Ave.,
$. E., Atlanta 16.

Chrysanthemum plants,
Daisy, large lavender, pink,
ellow, cream, Cushion yel-
iow, Pom Pom white laven-
der, bronze, med. size yellow
nd white, large, early red,
5 doz. $1.: white Confederate
ne yellow winter blooming
asmine, 50c ea; 4 doz. Liri-
pe, $1. Add postage. Per. 36.

rs. J. R. Hinson, Box 104,
Chester.

Choice Cannas, Pfitzers
@warfs, primrose yellow, sal-
mon pink, Chinese coral, 75c
ea: Grand Opera, pink La-

oheme, LaTraviata, Mignon,
dwarf red President, Rosa-
gnond Cole, Gladaflora, Cop-

fe: Giant and white, 50 ea;







large Mums, pink Spider, To-
yos pink, 12, $1. Add post-
ge under $2. Per. No. 42.
Mir. H. W. Law, Chula.



Summer blooming Cushion
es 4 col., 2 doz. $1.50;
all blooming Mums, large,
med., and small, at least. 20
@if. 3 doz. $1.50. PP. Moss
acked. Per. 126. Mrs. H. B.
Roberson, Chula.



Rare variety African Vio-
jet leaves, 12, $1.; dwarf bor-
@er Mums, mix. col., 12, $1.

dd postage. Per. 199. Mrs.
_ A. Scott, 1570 Elleby Rd.
Ae Atlanta 15 Ph. MA 7-

500 Buttercups (bloom Jan-
wary to April), Emperorstyle
and some little later, small
shallow cups, pale yellow,
gweet scented, yellow cluster
and sweet scented white Daf-
fodils, white or orange Day-

ilies, purple Flags, Easter
ilies, mix. col. Iris, for $2.50



P to 3rd zone. Per. 209. Mrs.
. E. Sanders, Rt. 2, Buchan-
gn.
Cushion Mums, 3 col. 25
plants, $1.95; large Chrysan-
themums, 3 col. 25 plants, $1.-
75: purple Iris, large, $1. doz;
_ Dwarf yellow and brown Iris,
$1.25 doz; Shasta Daisies, 3
cents ea. Dbl. Daylilies, or-
ange, $1, doz. No order less
95. Add postage. Per. 251,
Milfred Weaver, Rt. 1, Bu-
ebanan.

Dutch Amaryllis, Ludwig
gir. solid red, pink or white,
5. ea., 3, $13.50; 1 yr. seed-

ngs, mix. from solid colors,

, $5. PP. Per. 191. Beek-

jth D. Smith, 684 Elmwoo
Dr. N. E. Atlanta 6.





MARKET BULLETIN |

Moon vine, very large,
white, fragrant, 15c doz. seed,
and stamped envelope. A. H.
McGuire, 3214 Sewell Rd., 8.
W. Atlanta 11.

Coleus seed from nice vari-
eties, mixed, 300, 35c, plus
stamped envelope; 200 Sul-
tana seed, 6 mixed colors,
same price. Per. 25. C. R.
Herring, Rt. 2, Box 57, Bruns-
wick.

8 col. Cannas, $1. doz. fine
Daylilies, Amaryllis, Milk and
Wine Lilies, Umbrella Palms,
Spider Lilies, 25c ea. Tube
Roses, Foxglove, Chrysanthe-
mums, Ageratum, plants, 50c
doz. Add postage. Per. 44.
Mrs. W. E. Wooten, Rt. 2,
Box 150, Camilla 3.

Acuba plants, 3-5 in, pud-
dled, 10c ea. by the hundred,
or more; also in qt. cans, 35c
per can. Rev. A. O. Post, 463
Grant St. S. E., Atlanta 12.

Flowers

WANTED





Farmall Super A.. r
hydraulic lifts, headlights, tail
light, good battery, cranks
easily, good cond., smoothing
harrow, cultivators, planters,
bull dozer blade, 2 dise tiller,
all in good cond., $650.00. Bu-
ford Ussery, Rt. 6, Macon, Ph.
YU. 6-3466 (Gray).

1954 Intnl. Cub tractor with
Mott hammermill type mow-
er, Billy Lewis, Calhoun, Ph.
MA. 9-3894. :

Planters and cultivators for
Deere model M., also, belt
take - off. HE. M. Frederiksen,
Rt. 1, Winston, Ph. WH.
2991 (Douglasville).







1953 Ferguson 30, Wagner
end loader, 3 point hitch doz-
ier blade; 1948 WC Allis
Chalmers cultivators, planters,
tiller, harrow, peanut weeder,
drag harrow, tree planter;
Sawmill outfit, UD-14 1. H
motor, Corley 395 mill, Cor-
ley, Jr. edger, log cart, belts,
ete. C, L. Langham (Boston-
ville), Rt. 2, Warrenton.

tractor, |

+and dual wheel tractor wa-

-|for good Ford tractor and

tachment, nearly new Con-
tinental motor, and small ro-
to hoe cultivator, all in good
cond. Mrs. 'R. T. Williamson,
3205 Rockbird Rd. Rt. 3,
Stone Mountain (near Avon-
dale Estates), Ph. DR. 3-1850.

Deep well pump, jet type,
with 50 ft. duplex plastic pipe.
for sale. W. C. Meaders, 697
Whitehead Rd., Athens.

Intn] crawler T-6 tractor;
John Deere A. and B. tractors;
6 dise plow; side rake; 20 disc
harrows; New Holland baler;
Case Combine; hammer mill





gon, E. K. Mann, Newnan.

W. C. Allis Chalmers trac-
tor and good heavy built
Athens (sealed bearings) 8
dise harrow; 1951 Chev., 1-
1/2 ton truck. Allin good
cond., priced to sell ur trade



harrow. J. lL. Moore, Jr., Rt.
4, Greenville St., Ext., New-
na Ph. AL. 3-3596 after 5



Iron Age, 2 row, transplant-

lev with fertilizer attach.,
$250.00; also, Vanbunt, 1 row,
transplanter, $75.00. R B.

Harrell, Eastman, Ph. 374 -
2774.



Want cutting of Beefsteak
Begonia (round thick glossy
leaves), and Sultana with
variegated foliage. Advise be-
fore sending and price. Mrs.
G. G..Bledsoe, Rt. 1, Chula.

Want about 700 boxwood
cuttings, at least 12 to 15 in.
high, ready to be set out. State
best price and what kind you
have. W. R. Arnall, Luthers-
ville, Ph. WA. 7-3455.

Want two Lemon Verbena
shrubs or cuttings and 3 Rose
Geranium plants or cuttings.





State price. A. D. Cullen, 4
Ave. of Pines, Wymberly,
Savannah. ;



Want red or pink dbl. Be-
gonia. Mrs. J. B. Wood, 201,
Waddell St., Marietta.

Want seed of an old time
flower known as Blazing Star,
it resembles a Hollyhock, has
stickers and stems. Quote
price. Howard H. Vance, 2017
Ohio Ave., Augusta.

Want some old fashion Lady
Slipper or Touch - Me - Not
seed, all cols. Mrs. Bell How-
ell, Hahira.





Electric brooder, used only
one season, 400 chicks
$15.00. Mrs. H. J. Holland, Rt.
1, Temple, Ph. 662-3414.

6 disc John Deere - tiller
plow, good dis with rig for
cylinder and seed box attach~-
ments, $65.00. Loyd Keadle,
Gatesville.





chicken prooder,
488 Claire
\o, Ph. PL.

Electric
$10.00. L. M Mann
Dr., SW, Atlanta
38-7297.

Windmill with tank, in good
cond., $25.00. Buyer mus t
take down. Located 10 mi. N.
of Buena Vista on Hwy. 127.
Norman Grier, Rt. 1, Mauk,
Ph. MI. 9-2181.

4 automatic water drinkers;
five, 5 ft., feed hoppers and
about 250 ft. galvanized, 1/2
in., pipe with fittings, all used
only 1 season; 50 ft, copper







pipe; Simplex cotton duster
| (needs some repairs), IHC
stalk cutter in good shape.

Both mule drawn. Cheap at





Want Crepe Myrtle and
Gardenia or old fashion Cape
Jasmine plants. Also want 2
white scuppernong vines.
Write giving prices. Mrs. O.
H. Hitt, 1313 Merry St., Au-
gusta.

Want rooted eutting of old
fashion Green Rose; also,
want one cup purple hulled
String Bean seed. Mrs. Zollie
E. McMichen, Douglasville.

Want one dozen dif., bright,
color, large size, Dahlia. Mrs.
W. M. Saunders, Rt. 1, Hele-
na.

Want Crape







Myrtle and

Gardenia or the old fashion
Cape Jasmine plants; also
want 2 white Scuppernong

vines. Advise. Mrs. O. H. Hitt,
1212 Merry St., Augusta.

Equipment

FOR SALE





McCormick 76 combine with
motor, good cond.; 2 Intnl.
truck, good cond. Mrs. C. J.
Arnold, Elberton, Ph. 390.

Aer Motor windmill for
sale. W. E. Dye, Sr., Byrom-
ville.

Tractor drawn Oliver bot-
tom plow, 16 in. on rubber,
$100.00, or exch. for disc plow
or cultivator and planter for
Farmall A.; also, 1930 A mo-
del Ford pick-up truck, metal
cab and body. T. S. Ouzts,
Box 68, Winder, Ph, 867-3890
(no collect calls). i

6 dise tiller with new parts
in trip wheel with seed box,
all in good cond., $160.00. R.
L. Clements, Comer, Ph. SU.
3-4870.

1946 Intn] dump truck, 2
speed axle, good quart except
engine, $150.00. D. F. Kirby









Fayetteville, Ph. 461-4593.

my place. G. W. Emmett, Rt.
4, Dahlonega.

Jet well pump, just over-
hauled, like new. Cleo Blan-

kenship. Rt. 1, Eastman.



Good, wide steel tire, John
Deere farm wagon, makes
good tractor wagon, $50.00.
Jerry Walker, Rt. 3, Milan.



440 gal. Zero vacuum, bulk,
milk tank, 2 HP Copeland
compressor, 2 yrs. old, $1,700;
SP-i1 Surge, 4 unit, vacuum
pump, $150.00. Floyd Jenkins,
Rt. 1, Box 387, Fairburn, Ph.
964-4134.



John Deere, all steel, hay
paler, mounted on rubber
tires, equipped with Wiscon-
sin air-cooled motor, all in
good eond. (not automatic
type), $115.00 FOB. Roy D.

ankersley, Appling.

Cub tractor, top
cond., good tires, - planters,
cultivators and turner plow,
$650.00. Can Deliver, Roger
S. Cobb, Box 355, Marietta.

_ 2 AC combines, model 60;
J. D. combine model 12-A
and M: Farmall for parts. W.
R. Whitehead, Comer.

Van Brunt grain seeder, fits
5 disc John Deere tiller, in
good cond., $25.00. Faris. Gc
Malcom, Rt. 1, Monroe, Ph.
268-4193.

Model 7-A, 3 HP, rototiller,
long life Clinton engine; also,
model 23, 4 hp self propelled
rototiller with long li-fe
Clinton engine. Both new
cond. B. P. Casteel, 1882 Clair-
mont Rd., Decatur, Ph. ME
4-4562.

1956 Ford









tractor model
640, series 600, 2 row, 650
hrs., like new, cultivators,
planters, distributors, s id @
dresser, 2 dise plows, smooth-
ing harrow and stalk cutter

hart, Rt. 1, Hiram, Ph. 943



5442 (Pow

(pull type). oyd M. Elber-



ex Springs)

cap.

running

.|tractor with turning plow,
harrow, cultivators, all in
good cond., $150.00. Homer

.| Baggett Rd., Winston, Ph. WH.

Mowing machine for Far-
mall tractor and 6 row cotton
duster for sale. R. F. Enge-
a McDonough, Ph. 423 -

Massey Harris tractor mo-
del 30 with front-end loader,
2 row cultivators and 3 disc
plow mounted, all good cond.,
$1,200.00; also, Pasture Dream
with small seeder, like new,
$500.00. Lewis Teal, Rt. 4,
Box 150, Douglasville, Ph.
WH. 2-2007.

1 row 1950 Farmall A trac.
all planting equip., bush and
bog harrow, tiller plow, mow-
er, rake and 2 wheel trailer;
also, 1952 GMC pick-up truck.
J. H. Bell, Rt. 4, LaGrange
(near Troup Co. cattle Sale
Barn).

1956 Masey Harris com-
bine, 90 special selfpropelled
with Chrysler industrial en-
gine, 14 ft. cut., good cond.
Deliver up to 200 miles. No
letters. James H. Campbell,
ae Douglasville, Ph. WH.

Rife hydraulic water ram,
excel. cond., $65.00; elec. arc
welder, 300 AMP DC, fits
Ford tractor, 3 point hitch and
is driven by power take-off,
$125.00; trailer, 2 wheel flat
bed, 7 x 10 ft., homemade,
$45.00. L. L. Jackson, 362 |
Cunningham Road, Marietta,
Ph. 428-4689. :

Good 1954 Ford, 6 cyl. pick-
up truck with new rack for
sale or will trade for good
Farmall A or John Deere A
tractor and some equip. in
good eond. Harold Derby, Rt.
4, Dahlonega. ;

Prac. new set of cultivators
and planters for Farmall H.
or M., $350.00; 2 bottom plow
for Farmall C., good cond.,
$125.00; pull type harrow for
Farmall C., $125.00 Sell lot
for $500.00. H. C. Emory, Rt.
Ae acces Park, Ph. PO. 7-

20 in. hammer mill, n e w
bearings, n e w hammer, 14
new belts, 14 groove V-drive,
for sale or will trade for pick-
up truck, Hubert Dobbins, Ma-
rietta. payee

1960 Intnl. I. 240 tractor,
used 7 hrs.; New model 100
balance head mower, 3 point
hitch; New model 209 bottom
plow with 2-16 in bottom, 3
point hitch; New Pasture
Dream rotary cutter, 5 ft.
cutting width, 3 point hitch.
Sacrifice. E. A. Thompson,
c/o Bank of Hancock County,
Sparta, Ph. 3411. ;

4 H. Page walking garden



















L. Folsom, 2275 Dodson Dr.,
East Point, Ph, 344-1488.

Complete set of cultivators
and planter attachments for
John Deere No. 40, good cond.,
used very little. S. H. Sebren,



2-2970 (Douglasville).

1954 Allis Chalmers 66,
sack type (no bin), combine,
excel. cond, throughout, dra-
per support panel installed
for large draper, straw chop-
ping attachment, has cut
than 500 acres, $700.00.

Rotary type plow with ate 1959












































1959 Taylo.
gerated, 35 ft.,
cond. W. B. Roberts,

Sawmill with 3 hea
good cond.; 2 John
row, cotton dusters, mu
tractor drawn. Alfred
Manchester. ne

1955 combine in very
cond. for
priced. Bill
Dearing.

1952 GMC, 3/4 ton,
clean with big transm
for sale or trade for good
tor with equipment, no
Ollie Allred, Rt. 1, B
an.

row, mo
mach., dump type 2
trailer, all in excel.
$1,075.00 or will sell sep)
ly. George I. Jackson,
ing Dr., Rt. 1, Box 51,
cross, Ph. 448-3536.

Model 610 (PTO) Ne
land forage harvester w
sickle bar attachment, $
dump type forage wagol
ton cap., $450.00. Used
little, Houston White, Jr.
1, College Park, Ph. PO.
6546. bees ee
Planters and distrib
with cotton hoppers f
per C. Farmall, good
$100.00; also, wide front
complete except wheels
rims, for late model J off
Deere 50, 520 or 530 tre
excel. cond., $150.00.
H. Fountain, Rt. 6,
Ph. BR. 2-4463. 3

1/2 ton Chevrolet pick
truck, excel. shape; 6 W
John Blue cotton duster,
springs, all steel fram
sidebody for cattle.
good shape. R. L. C

Rt. 2, Box 76, Copp
Hwy., Temple.

2 wheel trailer,
x 6 ft., wood body

| spare tire, $50.00. J. M.

Rt. 2, Tifton.
| One Blue 6 row cott
ter, used 4 seasons
small acreage, good
$50.00. J. A. Lowery,
Hastman: = ee
CA Allis Chalmers-
mounted cultivators, used
one season, fair cond.,
heavy duty smoothing he
needs some repair, $75.00
Idea tractor mower, usec
little, excel. cond.,
William G. Ison, Brook:

Irrigation system:
pump with connections
Ford and Farmall tracto
power, 400 ft. of 3 in
coupling aluminum pipe
plete with sprinklers
20 ft. of 4 in. suction
Marvin G. Elsberry,
ram, Ph. 943 - 4736 (
Springs). eee

12 disc Ontario grain
$100.00; 12 #t. wide J
Deere hay rake, $75.0
Deere 12-A combine,

10 disc heavy duty King

and bog harrow, $75.0/
dise Athens dise tiller, $
Stockland hyd. scoop, fit}
and M. Farmall, $75.00. ()
ton Beall, Stapleton (10
So. on Rt. 296). a

Elec. fence charger,
fron wheel trailer, $25.00;
off saw, $25.00; combing
Cole -planter and distribi
$15.00; horse drawn drag
$5.00. M. D. Beauchamp, |
3, Harrison Shoals Rd.,
yers. : |
-1950 Oliver 60 tractors
running cond., $350 or w
bottom plow, $400. Jack D}
gan, Doss Rd., Rt. 1, Cars
Ph. GR. 9-3267. f

BARS N LTE Mes SC Sea see
_ Ford planters, cultiva
pulley and mower, Ferg
plow, IHC 45 baler, Po.
pice gyake, 60 A. C.
ine, all in good eond.
cheap. J. B. Elder, Jeffe:
Ph. 367-8751.

All kinds plows,
planters, corn planters, h





| Howard, PO
Ph.

Box 184,
2-07













B and B, harrow for use
ith Ford tractor, reasonably

| priced. R. L. Wood, Rt. 4, Dal-

las Rd., Marietta. ;
1/2 HP well pump, almost

-lnew, complete with 1/2 HP
























bog harrow, n e w
ings, good tires,

: (hyd. operated),

ith rubber tires, in

d., $450.00 cash or

- Farmall Cub trac-

0, 1946 Chevrolet jsick-
truck, $225.00. Jim S.
Rt. 3 (Between Com-
Monroe, Ph. 267

ord 1/2 ton pick-up

:, good motor, tires, body
sideboards, sacrifice,
Walter Poe, 1370 De-
ve., NE, Atlanta 7. Ph.

Equip.: 10 HP Look-

er with flues, oil or
ed, with all automatic
rols; also, CP No. 27 auto-
bottle filler for round
re bottles. Both cheap

h and in extra good
ed. Hendrix. Rt. 3;

od, Ph. GR. 4-7365.

58 Allis Chalmers trac-
2 row planter, dbl. sec.
way harrow, 2 disc bot-
ylow, rotary harrow, 2
cultivator, set of, defend-
set of side dressing out-
all good as new, belt pul-
vand 4 wheel farm trailer,
1958 Jeep utility wagon;
tee 2 Ur ee W. R. Gor-

2, Stone Mountain, |

469-5221.

ound type Sears incuba~
100 hen egg cap., $10.00.
). Reece, 7865 Roswell Rd.,
pe Ph. 993-4180 af-

style bush and bog
8 disc, 24 in. diame-
Imost new, $125.00.
Maxwell, Rt. 1, Da-
. TH. 3-2914 (Law-
lle). ees
g bush and bog harrow,
isc, new disc and new
like new, priced to
Hugh Goodson, Frank-

AC Case tractor for parts,
good rear tire size, 11 x
(motor no good). First $60
s all, Ben Robinson, Rt. 4,
POMtON see i

llis Chalmers WC tractor
_8 disc bush and bog har-
r, tractor has good tires,

fit. $400.00. F. D. Cobb,
Parkway Dr., Thomaston,
7-7671 days.

leadows Corn mill, 30 in.
kk; also motor to run mill.
A. Kirby, Rt. 4, Swains-
o-(at Apex Oil Co., 60.
ry. No. 1).

Mule drawn Cole planter,
iributor, 1 H. wagon an d
wer goober turning plow.
E. Diamond, Rt. 1, Col-
e Park, Ph. PO. 1-5506.

set of John Deere B. plant-
and cultivators, $100.00,
mters are old type and cul-
ators are new type, in good
id. J. E. Harwood, Buck-
id, Ph. 592-R-2 (Madison).

i} HP Simplicity garden
ctor with cultivator,
crow and 36 in. sickle mow-
used very little, $250.00
L. Pope, Rt. 2, Buchanan,
eal O ie ee

disc

|elec. motor, needs new tank,

$45.00 plus shipping charges
if shipped. W. E. Colvard, Rt.
1, Jefferson.

13 low pressure automatic
hog waterers with connecting
ell, $2.50 ea. or $30.00 for lot.
H. T. Jennings, c/o Shady
Crest Farm, Rt. 1, Hiram, Ph.
WH. 2-2047 (Douglasville).

Farmall Cub tractor, har-
row, tilter, open plow, culti-
vators, pulleys, used very lit-
tle, just to tend small patch-
es in good cond., $800.00. Can
be seen at my place. Oliver
Harrington, Rt. 4, Hammett
Rd., LaGrange.

Want one water pump with
elec. motor suitable for pump-~
ing water from lake to cabin.
Must be reasonable and locat-.
ed within 50 mi. of Macon. G.
L. Durden, 5017 Bloomfield
Rd., Macon.

Allis Chalmers forage har-
vester with 3 attachments;
Forage blower with pipe; cul-
tivator for W. D. tractor. L.
Ce Rockmart, Ph.
3887. | 5

~ Equipment

WANTED





Want 200 large size James-
way hanging feeders; an y
amount up to 50 late model
Cumberland - Case or Brad-
shaw, 8 ft., water troughs
and up to 400 ft. of 1/2 in.
galvanized water pipe. W. E.

Want corn gristmill, Cole
36 in. or 42 in. rocks. No
other make considered. Must
be in good cond. George M.
Adams, Rt. 1, Box 10. Colum-
bus, Ph. FA. 3-1456.

Want 15 ton truck scale
'with recording type beam.
Prefer located in So. Ga. and
would consider without re-
cording beam. State age, cond.,
price, model and serial num-
ber. Must be in excel. cond.
C. M: Pippin, Jr., Rt. % Al-
Dany se See ay

Want 400 or 600 hen egg
cap. electric incubator, in
good cond. Joe H. Mitchell,
oe 264, Duluth, Ph. GR. 6 =

_ Want good used, 3 row, cul-
tivator for John Deere trac-
tor, in 100 mi. radius of Win-
ae C, O. Maddox, Sr., Win-
er. d

Want Planet, Jr., 2 horse,
riding cultivator, B. H.
Housch, Rt. 2, Summerville.

Want cultivator for Ford
tractor. State cond. and best
cash price. Jerry W. Talley,
Rt. 1, Lyons, Ph. 2632.

Want John Deere A gas
burner, late model, square



or John Deere 60 gas burner.
Must be clean and in good
cond. Write cond. and_price.
Frank T. Compton, PO Box
133, Comer.

Want turn plow and disc
harrow for MW garden trac-
tor model Mid. 5458-5. Must
be cheap for cash or will sell
my tractor and cultivator for
$125.00 cash. A. E. Burnett,
Rt. 8, Rome, Ph. 232-8276.

Want 82 gal. water tank
for ene pu oeee John
A. Ray, Rt. 3, Jasper, Ph. 735-
2061 (Nelson).













Wood wheel, 2 H., wagon
th body, $25.00; shop blow-
$20.00; 2 H. turner, $15; 1
turners, $7.50; guano dis-

butor, $7.50; cotton planter,

50. Olen B. Reid, 104 Park
ne, Thomaston.

625 gal. water tank for
e, location 3 mi. N. of Bu-
d on Roberts Cross Road.

R. Pirkle, Rt. 2, Buford.

row cotton
model, make,
We tractor
acre h

Want used propane g a 8
tank cheap for cash, 50 gal.
or larger. State price and
size. R. A. Plastridge, Rt. 1,
Greenville.

Want bull gear for final
drive for HD 10 Allis Chal-
mers crawler tractor. Must he
in good cond. C. F. Arrington,
Wrens, Ph, LI. 7-2054,

Want used 2 dise Ford
plow with 8 point hitch, will
pay up to $65.00; also, want
old pull type, abl. disc, har-
row, will pay up_to $40.00.
Within 100 mi. radius of At-
lanta od, W 1



McCleskey, Rt. 3, Adairsville.

seat with rotomatic front-end|C

Want Case MT ger., 7 ft.
mow. and L series Case grain
drill for part. Reply in detail
as to which parts are missing
or broken, state price. Dal-
ton Mathis, Rt. 4, Box 192,
Fitzgerald, Ph. 6932. :

Want mule drawn cottton
duster in good cond. H. A
ae Apalachee, Ph, 532-W-



Want one feed mixer for
cows and hogs, 500 to 2,000
lbs. Cap. G. W. Clifton, Rt. 1,
Box 141, Springfield.

Want 2 concrete, stone or
metal silos, preferably 18 ft.
diameter; also, want cutter
bar for late model Fox forage
harvester or 2 row header
for Gebl harvester and 2 rear
wheels and rims for DC Case
tractor, . J. Hendrix, Jr., Rt.
3, Alpharetta.

Want small, used, riding
garden tractor, Huski or Sim-
plicity, etc. Must be within
60 mi, radius of Dalton. G. E.

Moore, Harlin Dr. Rt. 1,
Rocky Face.
Want tube feeders, auto-

matic waterers and heaters to
equip. two, 6,000 cap., chicken
houses. Must be in good cond.
and reasonable. Barnett Chas-
tain, Santee.

Want late model Ford 800
series tractor and 5 - 6 HP
garden tractor. G. M. Ander-
son, 148 Mt. Vernon Dr., De-
catur, Ph. DR. 7-8401.

Want rotary mower for
Fordson tractor, 8 point hitch.
State price and gone W. L.
Wilson, Box 889,

Ph. CA. 6-1751.

Livestock

FOR SALE



Cattle

Dbl. Reg. polled Hereford
pull, HHR Victor Battle, 3
yrs. old, dark red color, wt.
approx. 1;700 Ibs., best o
bloodlines, priced to sell. No
letters ans. Hardwick Harris,
Gibson.

Reg. Jersey show bull, 3
yrs. old, Rajah Lynn Com-
mando, sired by Commando
Advancer, Jr. eee paer ay
good every respect, excel.
ploodlines, reasonably priced.
Becky Bentley, 1119 Barner
ae Rd., Marietta, Ph. 428-

5 dbl. Reg. polled Hereford
bulls, 12 to 16 mos. old, $150.
to $250. All large for age and
good color; also, 8 dbl. Reg.
Polled Hereford open heifers,
10 to 15 mos. old, $175. ea.
All sired by A Prince
Leskan 10. James L. Hadden,
Gibson.

Reg. Angus bull, 13 mos.
old, ready for light service by
mid-summer; i. bull, 8
mos. old, make real good herd
bull, Both from accredited
herd, outstanding bloodline
and reasonably priced. Lynn
Stephens, Rt. 1, Roberts
Rd., Marietta, Ph. 428-2673.

60 quality Holstein heif-
ers, will start calving Aug.
10, wt. 900-1,000 lbs, BVC
and extra teats ae horns re-

moved. W. W. Hitchcock, Rt.
4, Valdosta, Ph. CH. 2-5241.
Reg. Guernsey cow, 6. yrs.

old, large size, heavy milker;
Guernsey cow, 8 yrs. old, ar-
tificially sired, large, good red

color with 2 wk. old heifer
calf, artificially gired, Clif-
ford Westerfield, 116 White-

head Rd., Athens, Ph. LI. 8-
4010. : :

Jersey and Guernsey bred

heifer, due to freshen last of)

April, bred eee Guernsey;
also, Reg. uernsey bulls,
service age, reasonably priced.
F. H. Bunn, Midville.

Excel. Reg. dehorned Here-
ford bull, calves April 23
1960, well tamed and halter
broke. Selling to prevent in-

-| ler

homasville, | R

Cunningham Rd.,

f steers,

Small dairy herd with 631
Ib. base with Foremost Dair-
jes. Geeo. T. Farrar, 2380
Campbellton Rd., SW, Atlan-
ta 11, Ph. DI. 4-1695.

-9 Hereford heifers, 9 mos.
to 12 mos. old, eligible for
Reg. See on farm at Conyers.
Larry Morris, 801 So. Cand-

St., Decatur, Ph. DR. 3-
5463.

Holstein ist calf heifers,
vaccinated, bred to beef bull,
900 to 1,000 lbs. Houston
White, Jr., Rt. 1, College Park,
Ph. PO. 1-6546.

4 young Angus bulls, ready
for light service, best blood-
lines, O. B. 13th. Del. within
50 mi. radius, price for im-
mediate sale. Eliza Hayes,
c/o Model Farm, Rt. 1,
Sharpsburg, Ph. AL. 3-45538
(Newnan).

Black Angus bull, regist-
ered, 12 mos. old, Eileenmere
breeding $150. Mark McDan-
iel, Rt. 2, Calhoun.

Purebred polled Herefords: |:

11 cows, 1 bull, 3 of cows
with calves, others to come in
this spring; also, 4 young
heifers, wt. about 425 lbs. Fite
Casey, Rt. 3, Adairsville, Ph.
SP. 3-3389.

Guernsey and Jersey
springers, to freshen within
the next 2 wks., from heavy
milker dairy cows, Deen
Boatright, Rt. 4, Alma, Ph.
632-7226.

7 mo. old Shorthorn _ bull
calf, Reg., son of L. L. Nyren
Upright, out of Oakwood
Helen of Commander In
Chief. Blocky, straight, good
bone, dark roan. See at farm.

. C. Chandler, 300 Sunset
Hill, Thomaston.

Hereford cattle: 6 cows, 3
with calves by side, 3 to
freshen soon, one Reg. herd
bull. All purebred, some cows
with Reg. papers, entire herd,
$1,500. L. L. Jackson, 362
Marietta,
Ph. 428-4689.

31 beef cattle: 5 springer
Angus, 2 open; 7 springer
Hereford, 2 open 4 open Here-
ford heifers; 11 Hereford
450 to 750 lbs.; also,
3 gaited saddle mare with 17
mo. old filly colt. Howard
Young, Rt. 1, Fairmount. Ph.
MA. 9-5661 (Calhoun).

Thoroughbred Black An-
gus bull (no papers), 3 yrs.
old, wt. approx. 900 to 1,000
lbs., $250. Robert N. Gilbert,
Fayetteville Rd. Jonesboro,
Ph. GR. 8-8777.

Reg. Ayreshire bred heifers,
due in Sept. or sooner; also, @
few calves, 5 mos. old. an
few young cows due this fall.
All top bloodlines, calfhood
vaccinated. C. J. Hendrix, Jr..
Rt. 3, Alpharetta.

= PAGE FIVE: -
3 Yorkshire boar mos. _
old pigs, purebred and Reg.

$25. ea. without papers, $27.
with papers. Reuben Tyler,
ee Buena Vista. Ph. MI 9- |

16 Landrace cross 6 wks

old pigs, castrated, wormed,
$12.00 ea; 18 mo. old Reg.
Landrace boar, life treated

for cholera, $50. D. F. Kirby,
Hie Fayetteville. Ph. 461+

Reg. Hampshires (only
Hampshires bred on this
farm) meat type, out of best
bloodlines, treated and dis-=
ease free. Weaned pigs, males
and females, open and bred
gilts, boars large enough for
service. C. G. Studstill, Rt. 1,
Eastman. Ph. 3908.

Hampshire gilts, bred and
open from Cert. meat sires,
and some bred to Master
Guide. Guar. free of infec-
tious disease, State Cert.
Bangs free. Forest M. Arnold,
Rt. 3, Baxley. Ph. 3551,

Duroc sow, reg. approx.
500 lbs. 1 litter of pigs, $70.;
Duroc sow, not purebred,
$35. Both sows now bred to
Reg. Duroc male; also, 15 mos,
old Reg. Duroc male with pa-
pers, wt. approx. 500 lbs.,
$70. Buford Ussery, Rt. 6, Ma-
con. :

Duroe pigs, $25. ea. with
papers. M. M. Newsome,
Sandersville. Ph. 3856.

Purebred Tamworths, boar
ready for service, good se-
lection of gilt, all from best
bloodlines, long deep bodies,
cherry red and good carcases.
Mrs. Charles Baldwin, c/o
Chas. Baldwin Farm, Su-
wanee. Ph. 434-7527 (Bu-
ford).

_ Reg. SPC pigs, best blood-
lines, long meat type, fine for
4-H project, at my place or
place order soon. George
Ferguson, Rt. 1, Cave Spring.

OIC breeding stock, medi-
um blocky type, pigs, 6 wks.
old, April 15, $20. ea, Reg.
and treated FOB; also, 2 yr.
old boar for sale at farm,
$45. No Sunday sales. Paul J.
Cain, Rt. 1, Commerce.

Reg. Tamworth pigs, sired
by Cert. meat type male. 80
head to pick from, ready to
move in about 2 wks., $25. ea.
either sex. Place orders now.
D. D. NeSmith, Rt. 3, Coch-
ran.

Purebred Hampshire boars
and gilts, 2 mos. old, 35 to 45
lbs., from FFA _ chain sow,
$18. to $20. Larry DeMore,
Rt. 1, Clarkesville. Seats

d} Full blooded little b one

African Guinea pigs, at my
place, 1 mi. So. of Mill Creek

Church. Lee Henderson, Rt.
1, Rocky Face.



22 range bulls, dbl. Reg.
polled Herefords, CMR and
Texas Domino bloodlines, 8
to 24 mos. old, $125. to $225.
Paul Carpenter, Rt. 5, Tifton,
Ph. 1523-R-4.



Reg. Guernsey male, 2-1/2
yrs. old, dehorned, ring in
nose, well marked, Riegeldale
bloodlines and sure breeder.



H. W. Thurmond, Farming-
ton.

Guernsey milch cow, due
to freshen April 15th with

second calf, $175.; also, 9 mo.
old bull, wt. about 500 Ibs.,
$100.: good mule and_wa-
gon, $100. A. W. Stapp, Rt. 2,



Tucker, (near Rehoboth
Church).
Dbl. standard Reg. polled

Hereford bulls, 7 to 18 mos.
old, excel. bloodlines, good
color and size, reasonably
priced. Roy Goddard, Rt. 2,
me (Klondike), Ph. 482-

5 head of: cattle one ea.:
cow giving milk; part Angus
cow to freshen with 2nd calf;
Jersey heifer, 15 mos. old;
black bull about2 yrs. old
and bull yearling, 15 mos. old.
Sell all or part. Mrs. J. D. Hen-
derson, Rt. 1, Woodstock, Ph.
GL. 5-6696.



breeding. Carl Roberts, Ball .
Ground. Swine
Reg. hornea Hereford bull,| Yorkshire breeding stock,

3-1/2 yrs. old, calfhood vac-



cinated er Bangs, pedigree
free of dwarfism, orous
breeder, for gale or trade for
Hereford ows or heifers.
nderson, oe Mt. Vernon
Deeatux, Ph ~8401,



finest bloodlines, extra large
litters, good milkers, fast
gainers, best of disposition,
us lees boars and a
iple treated, disease free.
J. Chambless, Homerville

ARd. Nashville. Ph. 3411.





Black Poland China pigs,
weaned,
from Reg. Cert. meat type
breedings, $25. up; also, can
furnish gilts and boars unre-
lated, open gilts, 175 lbs. $60.
ea.; bred gilts, $125. Jas. R.
Mars, Cochran, Ph. WE. 4-_

Reg. Berkshire pigs, all
type, from leading bloodlines,
farrowed in February. 8S. Y.
Sosebee, Rt. 1, Demorest (1
mi. N. of Habersham Mills).

Horses, Mules & Ponies

Mare mule, wt. 1,000 Ibs.
A. B. Gibbs, Rt. 1, Conley,
Ph. MA. 2-8787. 5

At Stud: Pinto stallion, Reg.
Mares pastured at farm .Gwen
Cook, Stone Mountain, Ph.
469-8403.

Good mare mule, 1,000 to
1,100 Ibs., works anywhere,
very gentle and 75 bu. corn
and 35 bales hay, all for $250.
Robert Thompson, Scottdale,
Ph. ME. 4-5653.

Jack ass, wt. about 500 Ibs.,
4 yrs. old, good for service.
$75. Juno Pruitt, Rt. 2, Smyr-
na, Ph. HE. -4322. :

Welsh buckskin colt, a Ts,
old, partly broke, also, fine
work mule. BE. R. Doak, 2161
Fellowship Rd., Tucker, Ph.
HI. 38-9611. Lae

2-1/2 yr. old, ang eee
black, wt. approx. 800 Ibs.,
gentle but spirited, sound and
in good cond., $125. or trade
for small Shetland pony. or
cattle, eve or take differ-
ence. H. T. Jennings, xobieieee
Crest Farm. Rt. 1, Hise Phe on
WH. 2-2047 (Douglasville),









treated, 40-60 lbs, - aC







Salat (hele te AR













"PAGE SIX

- 6925 (Albany).







Livestock

FOR SALE



Shetlands: spotted mare,
filly at side; black mare, colt
at side: Both foaled in March;
gentle, broke sorrel and
white, 2 yr. old, ready for
training; Reg. stud, 3 yrs. old,
dapple, WMT, proven breed-
er, will pull cart. E. M. Fred-
eriksen, Rt. 1, Winston, Ph.
WH. 2-2991 (Douglasville).

5 yr. old 389.in, gelding
Shetland pony, new black
saddle, bridle, martingale,
new harness, gold cart with
black foam rubber _ seat,
heavy duty tires, $850.; Reg
Palomino stallion, 1-1/2 yvrs.,
out of Quarter horse and
Tenn. Walker, just started
riding. Miriam H. Drew, c/o
Bruce Hancocks Farm, Louis-
ville.

Buddys Black Boy, Reg.
Tenn. Walking horse. One of
the most consistent-and out-
standing stallions now show-





ing. Roy Dorsey, 2561 Bohler
~Rad., NW, Atlanta 5, Ph. CE.

7-1115.

Pinto pony mare, 6 yrs. old,
gentle, no bad habits, good
mother; also, one buggy with
top, side curtains and rubber



tires, excel. cond. Ben F. Ma-

Jone, Hickory Springs, Rt. 1,
Box 90, Fairburn, Ph. 964-
4402, :

Good work mare, works
anywhere and rides, wt. about
1,000 Ibs. J. F. Gober, Rt. 2.
Temple.

Black mare mule with white
nose, blocky built, 12 to 15
yrs. old, good and gentle, wt.
about 1,000 lbs. pasture and
work mule, $135. with mule
bridle and gear. A. O. Tip-
pens, Rt. 3, Canton.

Good black mare mule, wt.
about 1,150 lbs., gentle, works
anywhere, middleaged. J. L.
Simpkins, Conyers, Ph. 482-







_ 6171 (Lithonia).



At Stud: Palomino stallion,
shown under name of Step
Easy Little Man. J. W. Van-
Horn, 4457 Covington Hwy.,
Decatur, Ph. BU. 9-5798.

Gaited saddle mare about
8 yrs. old with horse colt at
side, was bred ito 5 gaited
stud, goaled July 18, 1960,
entle for women and chil-
ren, no bad habits, both for
$255. C. A. Bennett, Rt. 1,
/Pine Valley Rd.; Powder
Springs. Ph. 943-4873. 3

Shetland pony, 3 yrs. old,
with bridle and new saddle,
. $150. Walter Cox, Rt. 1, Box
216, Leesburg, Ph. HE. 6-







Pr. black mare mules, 10
yrs. old, wt. 1,000 lbs. ea.,
work anywhere, good, gentle
and smooth. Ernest Head,
Suches.

3 nice small Shetland pony
mares in foal, one ea.: black;
brown and white; black and
white; 2 fillie colts, 10 mos.
old, one black, other red with
white mane and tail; 2 studs,
22 mos. old dapple, other 9
mo. old red with white mane
and tail. Ellis Lankford, 323
Loe St., Carrollton, Ph. TE.

4 Shetland ponies, 2 geld-
ings, broke, one sorrel stud
and one sorrel filly, both with
white mane and tail, bargain.
M. Ll. Frey, 5755 Memorial
Dr.. Stone Mountain.

At Stud: 28 in. silver dap-
ple Shetland pony, white
mane and tail, Fee, $20. with
return privilege, Mares
boarded at 75c per day. James
A. Cox, 2881 So. Estates Rd.,
Rt. 7, Macon, Ph. 788-2001.

Sheep and Goats
3 milk goats,













2 milking,

other milk soon, also 1 billy,

all for sale together separate-
ly, Imy place, just out of town.
David Dupree, Rt. 3, Box 211,
Hawkinsville. Ph. 893-7810.

_2 nice does, Nubian an d
Toggenburg cross, freshened
Dec. 15, 1961. Giving 3 ats.
daily, also French Alpine and
Tog. cross, freshened Jan. 24,



about the same amount milk,

$40.00 ea. Jacob . Heaton,
P, O. Box 171, Americus.

French Alpine billy goat,
born Jan. 31, 1961, also 2 does,
born March 17, All naturally
hornless, from high produc-
tion stock. Can be Reg. buy-
ers name. Reasonably priced.

J. M. Orr, 209 Westside Dr.
Acworth.

5 milk goats, 2 milking, 1/2
gal. milk daily. Have 3 kids
5 mos. old. Take $20.00 ea.,
for the 2 milking and $10.00
ea. for the kids (supposed to
freshen in June). $70 for all;
also, have 8 W. L. hens, 9 mos.
old, now laying, $1.50 ea. At
my place. V. R. Skipper, Rt. 1,
Lumber City. :

Livestock

WANTED







Want purebred polled Here-
ford bull. Riley C. Couch, Se-
noia.

Want to trade 2 white hogs,
wt. 200 Ibs. or more each, for
2 heifer calves, at least 3 or
4 mos. old, Jersey, Guernsey,
Holstein mixed, no beef stock.
Bring calves and pick up hogs.
Mrs. Zora Brown, Box 317,
oe Miami St., Rear, Scott-
dale.

Want golden Palomino mare
or gelding not over 9 yrs. old.
Must be gentle for children





Dial, Rt. 1, Gray.

Want 3 Whiteface, 18 - 24
mo. old, 700 - 1,000 Ib., hei-
fers in vicinity of Augusta. R.
F, Hensley, Rt. 1, Box 209,
Augusta.

Will pay reasonable cash
price for good, large size Jack
that is a proven sire, or one
that is too young to be pro-
ven, Write fully, giving full
description and best cash
price. Fred Sprewell, Rt. 2,
Carrollton.

Want Black Angus calf, wt.
150 - 200 ibs. State fully. H.
G. Couselyea, 2809 Washing-
ton Rd., Augusta. Ph. RE 6-
0982 (after 5 PM).

Want purebred P. C. pig
within 40 - 50 mi. Augusta.
State price and description.
Carl W. Epps, Sr., Stapleton.

~ Poultry

FOR SALE













Araucanus Haster E gg
chickens, purebred, laying col.
eggs, 5 col., $10.00 pr. Exp.
Col.; hatching eggs, asst. col.
35c ea. ine. insured parcel
post, special handling. M. O.
Mrs. Addie A. Edwards, 716
Myrile St. N. E., Atlanta 8.
Ph. TR 4-5152.

Purebred bantams, 12 dif.
breeds, Araucanus, Wild Mal-
lard and white Pekin ducks,
guinea and turkey latching
eggs, and baby fowl from the
above. Mrs. Nelle Long, P. O.
Box 565 Woodstock. Ph. GL
5-6988.

G. Sebright, R. I. Red, Bl.
Rose Combs, BB Reds, W.
Silkies, Bl. Cochins, W. Coch-
ins, part Cochins, $4 pr.; also
eggs 15 var., 15, $3.00 H. M.
Adams, Douglasville.

Araucanus roosters, hatched
rom blue eggs, 5 mos. old,
cheap if 5 or more taken; few
hens laying blue and. green
eggs; 1 mo. old chickens, $1.25
ea. Exp. Col. Send M. O. Mrs.
Willie Kinney, 140 Davis Dr.
Cartersville,

% Dark Cornish, Bulldog
type hens now laying and 2
roosters, $2.00 ea. E. H. Pace,
320 Cunningham Rd., Mari-
etta. Ph. 428-6119. -

Pit games, Bowles Clareta,
and Bells Roundheads, pure
or crossed, reasonable. Eu-
gene Peters, Rt. 3, Lawrence-
ville. Ph. TH 3-7827.

- 41 White hens, between 1
and 2 yrs. old, now laying,
$35.00 for lot and will p a y
shipping chgs. W, E. Colvard,
Rt. .1, Jefferson.

R. I.. Red chicks, 25, $6.00
PP or 20c ea, at my door; eggs,
15, $2.00 PP, Mrs. Don Don-
aldson, 726 So. Candler St,

















Decatur. Ph, DR. 38-2405.

and reasonably priced. Ann

Ph, TR 4-6452.

MARKET BULLETIN

Madigan Red Clarets and
Grays, Blue Cuban and Red
Claret cross, Warhorse-Madi~
gan Red Claret cross, Spang!-
ed Roundheads, full blooded,
hens and pullets, $3.00 - $5
ea.; cocks, $15.00 - $25.00;
stags, $10.00 - $15.00 shipped.
Eggs, 15, $4.00, 30, $7.00 S. C.
Boroughs, Rt. 1, Box 113,
Richmond Hill.

Giant Black Minorca eggs,
15, $3.00; 12, $2.50. Del. by
prepaid parcel post. L. B, Mil-
lians, Newnan.

Purebred R. I. Red bantams,
6 hens and rooster, 2 pure-
bred Golden Sebright and
40 common bantam hens, Hens
all laying. See, or will ship
FOB. T. F. Daniel, Rt. 1, Box
140, Statham. Ph, LI 6-7986.

6 dbl. breasted Bronze tur-
keys, Wagonwheel Ranch
breed, hens ready to lay, $5
ea.; best breed show type ban-
tams, Black and White Coch-
ins, White Jap Silkies, Span-
gled. games, hens laying, $2
ea. Exp. Col. M. O. only. L. J.
Smith, 1181 Rays Rd. Stone
Mountain. Ph. HI 3- 9403
(Clarkston).

6 White African guineas,
last yrs hatch, $9.00 for lot;
also common bantams roos-
ters, 50c ea. Cannot s hi p.
Clyde Bonw, Rt. 3, Dallas.

7 BB turkey hens and 5
toms, Bronze, also turkey
eggs for sale. Mrs. Emily Ma-
gness, Rainbow Dr. Decatur.
Ph, BU 9-2556.

Game & Fowl

FOR SALE















Northern Bobwhite quail
bred from unrelated breeders,
reared open flight runs. Strong
healthy and fully feathered.
Shipped via RR Exp., $3.00
pr. Per. 34. J. BE. Akins, 1531
Athens Ave. S, W., Atlanta
10.



Bobwhite quail, $2.50 pr.
Booking orders for quail eggs,
$30.00 C; pheasant eggs, $18
GG. Pew 147" Gs OKelley.
Maysville. Ph. OL. 2-2121.

Northern Bobwhite quail,
$2.50 pr; choice birds for
breeders, $4.00 pr; chukars,
$2.50 ea; chukar and guail
eggs. Per. No. 52. J. L. Tade,
Columbus. Ph. FA, 3-2422.

Guinea pigs (cavies), all





up; also, 1 pr. bantams, $2.
Ship Exp. Col. Send M. O.
Buster Davis, Rt. 2, Acworth.
No Sunday sales.

3 doe rabbits, 2 Whites and
1 Gray, $1.25 ea; also 30
mixed bantam hens, $1.25 ea.,
and i rooster free-with ea. 10
hens. Moe A, Moses, 4147 Idell
ae pe pHese Park. Ph. PO 7-
689.





Pheasant breeder e g Ss,
Ringneck, Mutants, Mongo-
lians, $1.00 doz. at farm or
Packed, crated and del. $1.50
doz.; also trio Blackneck
pheasants, now laying, $7.50.
J. H. Roquemore, Rt. 2, Amer-
icus.

American Giant Homer pi-
geons, red, yellow and checks,
$3.00 ea. M. G. de LaRue, 307
Spring St. Decatur.

Peafowls, per pair: 1 yr.
old, $20.00; 1-1/2 yr. old. $25.
Cannot ship. T. D. Reece,
7865 Roswell Rd. Dunwoody,
Ph, 993 = 4180 after 6 PM.

Peafowls, 4 pr., 1 yr. old,
$18.00 pr. and you pay ship-
ping chgs. H. A. Browning,
Rt. 5, Dublin. Ph. OR 2-4883.

Ped. N. Z. White rabbits,
best bloodlines, good type and
quality, 3 mos. old trio, $12;
4 mos. $14.00; or $4.50 single
and up. Ped. furnished. Sat.
guar. R. Lamar Brantley, Rt.
2, Box 79, Wrightsville,

Guinea pigs (cavies) for
sale or trade some for N. Z.
White rabbits. John Fields,
ape W. Poplar St. Griffin. Ph,

N. Z. White Ped. breeding
rabbits, 1 mo. to 2 yrs. old,
$5.00 up. See and make
choice. Ready to breed, does
and bucks. C. W. Page, 149
North Ave., N. E:, Atlanta 8.















sizes and colors, $1.00 ea. and



5 Ringneck pheasant, 1960
hatch, 4 hens and 1 rooster,
$10.00. Mrs. C. C; Clayton,
3551 Moreland Ave., Conley.
Ph. MA 17-2937. :

Quality Bobwhite a u ail
eggs, $15.00 C; $135.00 M, PP.

Per, i. L.-E. Brannen, Jr., 311
Savannah Ave., Statesboro.

Black and Dutch, also En-
glish rabbits, all marked good
and have pedigrees, for sale
or trade for game .-bird or
game bird equipment. Bobby
Phillips, 514 Rock Springs Rd.
aa ., Atlanta 9. Ph. TR. 4-







Poultry

WANTED



Want about 3 N. Z. White
rabbits old enough to breed.
* 2 Burtz, Roswell, Ph, 993-

52.

Want 10 = 15 laying pul-
lets or hens, prefer White
Leghorns, within few mi. At-
Janta. Mrs. W. H. Hearn, 6900
Campbeliten Rd., SW, Atlanta





Want all kinds of eggs:
chicken, duck, goose, turkey,
quail, to hatch on halves or
other suitable terms. Have
incubator of 600 chicken egg
cap. also mixed bantam
chickens, some setting, f o r
sale. Carl Dodson, 1192 The
Byway, N. E. Atlanta 6. Ph.|
DR. 3-6305.

Want about 1/2 doz. guineas.
Prefer them being shipped to
me. State what you have and
price. Charles Wyatt, Rt. 1,
Box 16, Fairmount. :

Seed & Plants ,

FOR SALE







_ Red hot pepper, large pods,
15, 25c, Banana and Cow
Horn, 25c tsp., for home use;
garlic, $1.00 C.; Horseradish,
6, 50c; old time Comfry and
Elecampane, 3, 50c; Tanzy, 3,
25c; wild Strawberry, 35c
doz.; Wellowdock, 3, 30c. Per.
No. 93. Add postage. M r s.
Presley Fowler, Rt. 2, Elli-
jay.

-Several hundred Sterns
plum size Strawberry plants,
$3 C. PP. Damp cellophane
packed. All fine plants. No
order under 100. Per. 97.
Mrs. Z. D. Dodd, Rt. 1, Box
223, Alpharetta, :

Tomato plants: Big Boy,
10c ea.; Winsall plants, 50c
doz.; Burpee big early Hy-
brid plants, 10c ea.; giant tree
plants, 10c ea.; Marglobe,
Rutger and Stone plants, 35c
doz.; also sweet and hot pep-
per plants, 35c doz. Add post-
age. Per. 254. Damp packed,
no checks, no orders less than
$1.00. W. L. Brown, 1018 Lake
Ave., West Griffin.

Earliana and Rutger toma-
toes, bell and hot peppers,
dill, parsley, broccoli, brus-
sels sprouts, salsify, lettuce,
white nest onion and garlic
plants, Wakefield cabbage.
Heading collards, kohlrabi,
all 35c doz. Permit 41. Add
postage. No less $1.00 orders.
Mrs. H. V. Franklin, Sr., Rt.
1, Register.

Cabbage plants, 50c C.; 300,
$1.25; 500, .$2.00; $3.00 M.
Per. 152. Pick up or delivered.
J. R. Strayhorn, Rt. 1, Box
2581, Gainesville,

Govt. inspected and treated
Georgia Red potato plants, $4
M.; 2 M. and up, $3.50 M. Per.
45. Delivered, full count,
prompt shipment. Luther
Griffis, Rt. 2, Odum.

Georgia Red potato plants,
State inspected, count and
quality quaranteed, $4.00 M.
Roots protected, prompt ship-
ment, no checks, send Money
Order. J. H. Williams, Alma,
Ph. 632-5156.

















Boy Hybrid, Burges, Jumbo
Hybrid, Shumway, Abraham
Lincoln large, now ready, 50c
doz.; 5 doz., $2.00. Cash and
carry. No mail orders, Pe

Tomato plants: Burpee, Big].









Millions:

Heads improved
Georgia Reds, A
grown seed, $1.00 C
$2.50 and $3.50 M.; 3,
at $3 M. also, tomat









4846.

Everbearing
plants, $2.00 C. plus p
Per, 266. Mrs.. A. W.
Rt. 1, Box 96, Ball Gro

Sturdy field grown,
inspected, moss packed, t
to plants, now ready, Mj;
globe, Early Wonder, Ri

and Colossal, $4.00 M.; $

J.




















postage.

-| Dawson.

Rutger tomato plants
packed, 75c C.; $3.00
livered; California ~
sweet pepper and hot
plants, $1.00 C.; $4.00
Red potato plants, $4.
del. April 20th. Perm
No. checks. Leland Li
Rt. 2, Screven.

Kudzu Crowns, $12.0
Per, 236. Henry Ford, PO
147, Lavonia.



Germ. 94 pet., :
$2.00 pk. Add postage.
Brown, Rt. 1, Ball Grou

Good tender green
seed, Germination. i
50c cupful. Add postage. |
Bessie Silvers, Rt. 2, Ta
Rock. j

- Big Jim African gourd s
grows 4 to 6 ft. around, 50
er 4, $1.00. No checks,
money order or check. J:
Davis, Rt. 4, Waycross.

Jumbo gourd seed, 30, 2
and stamped envelope. De
Gulledge, Rt. 1, Dallas.









6





4









ner bean seed, Germ. 81
$1.00 teacup; mixed peas v
early Brown table peas, Geri/p
89 pet. 5 cups, $2.50; whil
Crowder peas, Germ. 87 pct.
cups, $2.25. All money orde!
no checks. Mrs. Lon Ashwort
Rit. 1, Dacula; -

Running Okra seed, Gert
90 pct. 1/2 cupful, $1.00 P
H. C. Reid, 2303 South Pryif
Rd., SW, Atlanta. cee

Little white 6-wk, bch. bee
seed, Germ. 78 pct. real ten}
der, Germ. 78 pct., $1.00 cuj

jest

BS
|


















2, Box 77, Ellijay. Hy
- 300 bu. combine peas, Ge

Eavenson, Rt. 1, Dewey Ros:
Ph. 1648-M-4 (Elberton). 4




garden Creaseback bean see"
Germ. 94 pct., 65 cupfu

pumpkin seed, Germ, 90 pc
25 pack; old time tender Poy!
corn seed, 90 pct. Germ., 5!
pt. Add postage. Mrs. Dewe
Ellis, Rt. 5, Box 58, Ellija

ful PP. Mrs. Lee Reece, Ra
90.50 pct. $3.50 bu. Robert JF

Old fashion, tender, whi :

stripped Crookneck Cusha}






Sale Events

APRIL 24 & 25 Monday
Tuesday Cordele (Cris
Co.) PONY SALE. ...

- 250 head Registered and
Grade ponies, best of breed!
ing stock also, plenty
of broke ponies for child
ren. L. L, Williams, Mer
Cordele, Ph. 273-3700.



Complete farming equipme:

PM at farm on Miller

Rd., DeKalb Co. ss >
All equip. to go at your
price tractor, grain dril
baler, combine, and muc











. M. J. Hambri, 44,
SW, Atlante






sale: Saturday April 15, 2:0

)

|

}



ome of the broken

ontinued From Page 1)

y, afew basic concepts of the
are discussed as follows:
mcidity is due primarily to the
eaking down of milk fat.

aused a rancid flavor and strong

dor which is very objectionable.
. The factor causing rancidity is
present in all raw milk. It is most
abundant during the latter stages
of lactation and when cows are on
dry feed. Some cows give rancid
milk almost continuously through:
out the lactation period.
. The size and number of the fat



down milk fat



: cidity which developes. In general,
the greater the number of globules

and the larger the total

area, the more probable it is that

rancidity will develope.

. Pasteurization destroys the factor
causes a rancid flavor and strong
milk is not rancid before pasteuri-
zation, it will probably not become

rancid afterwards.

Finally, if you are having continuing
problems with rancidity in milk, ask your
fieldman, county agent, or extension per-
sonnel for help. There are specific tests
which can be used for the detection of
rancidity. One bad supply of milk can
ruin a full tank load of milk going to a
dairy plant. Rancid milk cannot be used
for any consumer purpose and should be
discarded or used for animal feed.

surface

let:



: Managing Millet sa
For Milk, Meat

(Continued From Page 1)

keep an abundance of young grass avail-
able to the cows at all times. as

To produce the best quality grazing
for milk cows from Gahi-1 or Starr mil-

1, Plant in late April in the latitude of
Tifton, Georgia,
plantings at 3 to 4-week intervals there-
after until early August.

and make additional

2. Start grazing each planting when
the millet is 12 to 15 inches tall. Gahi-1
grows so fast it will get ahead of the ani-
mals and become unpalatable if grazing
is delayed. Rotate between two or more

(Continued On Page 8)



ned & Plants

FOR SALE





jian corn seed, Germ, 94
50c cup; gourd seed, 10c
plus stamped envelope.
W. E. Wooten, Rt. 2,
150, Camilla 3. _

od white 6-Week beans,
a, 78 pct., 75c pt.; early
e Corn, Germ. 97 pct.
yt.; Blackeyed peas, Germ.
iet., 50 pt.; Okra, germ.
et., 35 cupful. Add post-
Vella Rice, Rt. 1, Cum-

py,
5

ee
ed from Bushel gourds
A ft. around, $1.50 doz.;
1 3 to 4 ft. around, 50c
- also, Dishrag gourd seed,
doz. Send stamped se
ressed envelope.

n, Rt. 2, Tifton.

SAS es pues Lee oo
ourd seed: African Jumbo,
ik and Bushel type, 6, $1;
oer and Tree type, $
+ Martin, 50 doz.; In-

1. Wife Beater, 6, 50c; also,

apkin seed, Germ., 94 pct.,
doz. Send stamped self

ressed envelope. Harold
aes, Rt. 1, Box 87. Warm

ings.

ert. sweet potato plants,
Reds, ready April 3, $4
5,000 or more, $3.00 M.

my beds, none shipped. D.
Cason, Bristol, Ph. 3817

axley). os :

everal tons Brown Top
let seed, Germ, 90.50 pct.
ke best offer for entire lot;
), tomato plants, Rutgers,
0 M. at bed. Somewhat



her if packed in peat moss 4

| wrapped in even count
ikages. J. A. Bacon, Plains,
VA. 4-4821.

Superfection straw berry

nts, $2.25 C.; also, the last
the Sovereign Giants, $1.50
. PP, Ga. orders only. Per-
404. C. A. Shell, 1675 Wil-
Mill Rd., SW, Atlanta.

Seana onsen icneetnianae eA
ants; Rutger tomato, 300,
25; 500, $2.00; $4.00 M.;
lif, Wonder sweet and Ca-
ie hot pepper, same price;
ite Bermuda onions a n
arleston Wakefield cab-
ge, 300, $1.00; 500, $1.50;
50 M. PP in Ga. R. Chanc-
, Pitts, Ph. MI. 8-2035.

Mtn. Huckleberry, bearing
e, 25, $2.00; wild straw-
cry 3 doz., $1.25; Hazlenut
shes, 15, $2.00; Yellow root
idoz., $1.00; Black Walnut
dred Plum sprouts, 3
(25: Yellow root, washe
san, $1.25, 4 Ib. lardbox
cked full. Permit 5. Mrs.
wey Henderson, Rt. 3, Box
4, Ellijay.

ay, Feed, Grain

FOR SALE



us














proximately 250 bales of

globules affect the amount of ran-

-jleafy Sericea hay,

2,000 bu. Arlington Oats,
90c bu. at Farm. W. H. Good-
son, Franklin. Ph. OR. 5-3659.

Sev. hundred bales good
$1.00 bale
at my barn. S. H. Sebren, Bag-
gett Rd. Winston. Ph. WH. 2-
2970 (Douglasville) Call
noon, early morning or 8 PM.

_ Coastal Bermuda hay, high-
ly fertilized, $25.00 ton. Leon
Einsz, Stapleton. Ph. 7557
(Louisville) -

200 bales Brown Top Milect,
cut and cured right without
rain, bright, $1.00 bale, $40
ton. Square bales; also 100
bu. good yellow corn in
shuck, for Feed, slipped shuck,
no nubbins, $1.40 bu. at_my
farm. M. M. Newsome, San-



dersville. Ph. 3856.

Hay, 50c, 75c and $1.00 per

}#| bale. R. L. Jackson, c/o Flint

River Farms, Jonesboro. Ph.

1DR. 8-2245 (Atlanta).

150 bu. yellow corn in
shuck for Feed, at my farm,

{|5 mi. East Woodstock on Ar-

nold Mill Rd. Market price.
J. D. Henderson, Rt. 1, Wood-
stock. :

20 tons fertilized, bright
hay, $23.00 ton at barn. S. von

Schweinitz, Appling.

pe CRW II EU Lyrae eRe nant ese eee

30 tons hay, Coastal Ber-
muda, $25.00 ton; common
Bermuda, $23.00 ton. Del. for
smal j additional charge.
Pierce L. Cline, Rt. 1, Social
Cirele. Ph. 786-7821 (Coving-
ton) ;

Miscellaneous

FOR SALE





400 ft. of used hog wire,
$10.00. Joe A. Moses, 4147
Idell St., College Park, Ph.
PO. 7-0689.

Leaf mold, woods dirt and
cow barn compost mixture,
half and half, 75c bu. at my
home, located 1 mi. off Hwy.
140 N. of Folsom. Mrs. Ed
Stone, Rt. 2, Box 105, Adairs-
ville. ue :

Gourds: Martin and lon

d|Dipper, 25 ea.; ornamental,

20c ea. Add postage. Mrs. Roy
T. Pruitt, Rt. 1, Buford.

Log cart with good 7-50-20
ten ply tires, hand wrench on
cart, 1 saddle tank, 120 gal.
two 5th wheels. R. W. Evans,
Rt. 1, Box 146, Warm Springs,
Ph. 3-2532 (Pine Mtn.).

Gallberry honey in plastic,
12 Ib. gal., $3.97; 6 Ib., 1/2
gal., $2.27 PP. Send check and
exchange; also, gal. in glass,
$3.71 del. Atlanta area. W. R.
Smith, 2330 Park Ave., S. W.,

| Atlanta 15, Ph. PO, 6-6671.

Meat for sale: hams, $1.00
lb.; shoulders, 50c lb.; mid-
dlings, 50 lb, All cured at
home, no smoke, also, lard,
15 lb. by the can. Mrs. Clem
Usry, Rt. 1, Thomson.

- Big Japanese bamboo roots,
grows 60 ft. tall, 4 in. in dia,

-|and 14 in. around, $2.00 ea.



William G. Ison, Brooks.



10 elec. motors for sale, 1/2
HP or less, $15.00 ea. or $100
for lot. All completely rebuilt
with new materials and in
perfect cond. W. E. Eolvard,
Rt. 1, Jefferson.

Martin gourds, large 50c ea.,
small, 35c ea.; seed, 25c pkt.
and stamped envelope; catnip
and peppermint, 30c bunch;
sassafras roots, 4 Ibs. lard
boxful, $1.00 and 40 postage;
Queen of Meadow roots, 25c
bunch, 6, $1.00. Add postage.
Mrs. Freeman Long, Rt. 5,
Box 50, Ellijay.

Chicken house, 24 x 100 ft.,
good cond., all equipment goes
with it. W. A. Pilcher, Rt. 3,
Hwy. 141, Cumming, Ph. TU.
71-7434.

Nea banincrstan Oe Sa ee ee
2 bee hives, 10 frame pa-
tented hives and supers with

Cc. B. Summers, 131 Lee Rd.,
Mableton.

One can good home rend-
ered lard, approx. wt. 45 Ibs.,
15 Ib. Not shipped or de-
livered. Mrs. Jewel Daven-
port, Rt. 1, Culberson, N. ce
(Resident Union Co., Ga.).

25 squares 3-V metal roof-
ing, 6 to 12 ft. lengths, good
cond., $4.00 square or $75.00
for lot including valley, ridge
and scrap pieces, all galvan-
ized; also, 35 pieces 6 ft. light-
ening rod wire with stands,
insulators and rods, $5.00. All
at my home, L. C. Tyler. Rt.
1, Box 88, Preston,

About 30 cement post, $1.25
ea. at my place. Mrs. Charlie
Grant, 902 Fourth Ave., La-
Grange.

Miscellaneous

WANTED





Want Grandmothers yard
peas or beans (long). Mr s.
Janie Bennett, Sylvania.

OS AA teh Se

Want a few plants of Span-
ish pumpkin, West India pota-
toes and some Willow Leaf
Pole butterbeans. Mrs. Bell

Howell, Hahira.

frames, no bees, $10.00 for all.|P

Crocheted vanity sets, $1.00 :

set; crocheted rose doilies,
$1.50 ea.; pillowcases of nice
material with crocheted work
and edging, $2.00 set; aprons,
65c ea.; new quilt tops, pieced
by pattern, $3.50 ea. or 2, $6.
No checks or stamps. Dura
Bradley, Rt. 2, Waco.

Emb. pillowcases, good
sheeting, $2.00 pr.; ladies bon-
nets, $1.25 ea.; print aprons,
trimmed, 80c ea.; little girls
dresses, 1 - 6 yr. size, $1.90
ea.; 3 pe. vanity set, scarf to
match, emb. and lace trimmed,
$3.50; pot holders, quilted,
415@ ea. 2;,. 20c,, Mrs. ae Bp
Hudgins, Rt. 1, Temple.

S of t, washable, genuine
lambskin, b a b y moccasins,
blue, pink and white, all hand
laced and emb. in white, $1.25
r, PP. Mrs. Edgar Watkins,
Rt. 3, Calhoun.

Pillowcases of sheeting,
emb. and crocheted edge, $1
pr.; broadcloth pillowcases,
$1.25 pr.; dish towels, emb.,
7, $1.00; small aprons, 3, $1;
med. size, 50c ea.; old fashion
bonnets, $1.00 ea.; baby pil-
loweases, 2, 75c. Add 30c for
postage. Nell Bennett, Rt. 2,
Buford,

Old fashion bonnets, $1.00
ea.; aprons, small, 50c ea.;
medium, 60c ea. and large,
75c ea. Add postage. Mrs.
Floyd Major, Rt. 7, Gaines-
ville.

Quilt tops, of new material,
Circle Round Moon, Step
Around Mtn., Spool Tops,
Star of Texas, Log Cabin and
block designs, all $3.00 ea.
plus postage; also, new quilts
of new material, dbl. bed size,
Star of East and blocks, $6.90
and postage. Mrs. H, B. Flury,
PO Box 473, Soperton.

Solid Jeather, hand tooled,
billfolds with initials hand
tooled on end and Holy Cross
or praying hands on other
end, $3.00 ea.; also, leather,
hand tooled, billfolds with
Masonic emblem and initials,
game price. All PP. Mrs. An-
nie Henry, 1403 Hull St.
Rome.





Want 1/8 Ib. Sun, Moon and
Star watermelon seed. J. O.
Etheridge, Rt. 2, Gordon.

Want some Whatley seed
corn. O. E. Crawford, Rt. 3,
Barnesville.

Want spoiled hay _ for
mulching. Call or write be-
fore delivering. Carl Hall,
Blue Ridge, Ph. 2898.

OLS RAC BE eat ee Ye ee

Want bee hives and sup-
plies. Will buy or trade rab-
bits. Jim McWhite, 666 Sher-
wood Rd., NE, Atlanta, Ph.
TR. 3-3640.

Handicrafts

Single and dbl. bed size
quilt tops, $1.50 and $2.00 ea.
Will exch. some for pant
sacks. Add postage. Mrs. J. B.
Castelloes, Rt. 5, Moultrie.













White crocheted bootees,
trimmed in pink, blue, yellow
and green, 75c pr.; bibs too
match, both, $1.00; white cro-
cheted lace for pillowcases, $1
pr.; crocheted pot holders, 75c

ea.; crocheted dish rags. 50c|Ad
H.{aprons, $1.00 ea. Mrs. Roy T.

ea. Add postage. Mrs, H.
Robison, Rt. 1, Monroe.

Extra large Yo Yo _ bed
spread, of all color cotton
prints, will Jast a lifetime,
$45.00 or exch. for large size
crocheted bedspread. M r s.
Mary B. Bowman, Rt. 2, La-
Grange. s

Nice new guilt tops, of good
prints and solids, Jap Puzzle,
Cup and Saucer, Chicken
Heart and Gizzard, Bear Hoof
and Daisy patterns, all $3 ea.
plus postage; also, one Dutch
Girl appliqued, $4.00 and
others I dont know names of.
ars: Alma Pharr, Rt. 1, Can-
on.

Early American guilt tops,
Rolling Stone, Indian Hatchet,

Arkansas Traveler, all ready
to sew, cut from new percale,
2 and 3 col., $3.00 ea. plus
35 postage. Mrs. John Man-
ning, Rt. 1, Box 252 Wadley.

5 yds. new Biddy tatting,
50c yd. all fancy white; also,
6 yds. fancy dbl. white tat-
ting. No checks. Mrs. G. C.
Cp Rt3. Box: 1b Mak
en.

Full size cotton ruffled bed-
spreads, asst. cols. and two-
tones, $5.50 ea.; novelty pot
holders, 25c ea., 6, $1.00; dain-
ty aprons, 75c ea., 2, $1.25;
emb. dish towels, 35c ea., 3,
$1;-baby bibs, 25c ea., 5, $1.
Add postage. Mrs. Freeman
Long, Rt. 5, Box 50, Ellijay.

Little vaby diaper shirts,
dif. cols: and trimmed, 25c ea.
Mrs. James Davis, Rt. 7, Gain-
esville.

Emb. pilloweases of good
white sheeting, $1.50 set; good
size quilt tops, pieced of new
scraps, $2.25: hand woven not
holders, 10c ea. or 3, 25c. Add
postage. Vella Rice, Cumming.

: Crocheted center pieces, 12
in. diameter, 50c ea.; pillow-
cases, 40 in. with crocheted
edge and emb. trim, $1.50 pr.;
Pineapple bed spread, large
size, $35.00; dresses, 1 - 6 yrs.,
$1.50 ea.; pot holders and
hot plate mats, 25c ea. Mrs.
W. E. Wooten, Rt. 2, Box 150,
Camilla 3. 3

New dbl. size quilt tops, $1
ea.; also, others of new ma-
terial, dbl. bed size, $3.00 ea.

Add 15c postage per top; bed- |

spreads with ruffles of nice
material, $3.00 ea.; others,
plain, hand made, $1.50 ea.
d 30c postage per top;

Pruitt, Rt. 1, Buford.



Dbl. bed size quilt tops,
Step Around the Mountain,
$4.00 ea.; also, string tops,
$1.50 ea. Add postage. M rs.
Mittie Roper, Rt. 1, Canton.





2 vanity sets and matching
dresser scarves, one is white
with aqua blue edging, other
is all beige with all over cro-
cheting in wild rose pattern,
5 pes. to ea. set, $6.00 s e t.
Mrs. Ida Walker, 232 Maple
St., Carrollton.



Dbl. bed size quilt tops, of
prints and plain scraps, $3.00
ea. Mrs. Alice Westbrook, Rt.
2, Cumming,



One quilt top, dbl. bed size,

$2.75 PP: 3 fancy aprons, $1
ea.; small fancy aprons, 75c
ea., all are band aprons, PP.
No checks or COD. Mrs. W. T.
Langley, Rt. 3, Box 384 - A,
College Park. :

GrandMas bonnets, nicely
made of expensive prints,
$2.95 ea.; also, hand m ade
stoles, 2 yds. long with fringe
ends, of all wool, wool lace or
nylon and wool combination,
$2.95 and $3.95 ea. Add 25c
postage for ea. bonnet or
stole. P. O. money order. No
checks. Mrs. Jona Portwood,
PO Box 26, Blairsville.











PAGE EIGHT











. Average Top Average Top Average Top Average Top Average Top
Yield 53 bu. 100 bu. 450 Ibs. 750 Ibs. 24 bu. 50 bu. 21 bu. 40 bu. 2.2 Tons ATons
Cost 98bu. 70 bu. 26 |b. 17 |b. $1.75 bu. $1.02 bu. $1.55 bu. $1.25 $18 Ton $10 Ton
Profit $424 $36 $13.50 $90 $2.40 $37.50 $5.46 $18.49 $15.40 $60
per acre
(Reprinted by permission from P @ A Farming, March-April, 1961 Vol. 4, No. 4)

Set your sights for the big yields that
bring in high profits per acre, per bush-
el or per pound. The average yield just
doesnt return much. profit these days.
It costs almost as much to produce and
the return is much lower.

These figures were gathered by state
university economists who studied ac-
tual farm records. We used market or
support prices in figuring profits. The
above chart shows how the high and aver-



age yields compare from a profit stand-
point,

Why the big difference? Well, you
spend about as much time plowing, plant-
ing and harvesting an average crop as
you do a top crop. Cost of land probably
is about the same, too. Fertilizer, more
chemicals for pest control and perhaps
better seed do cost more. Getting the crop
in on time and doing a good job of man-
aging it, makes the biggest difference

and the oe cost is little, if all

higher.

Fertilize for the top. yields this ye
Those extra bushels or pounds are nea
all profit. See your PCA if you need he
in financing fertilizer, chemicals or otk
tools of modern farming. You'll find ye
PCA isa strong believer in adequate fi

tilization and other practices that st
up production. : ze



MANAGING MILLET

(Continued From Page 7)

pastures for best results.

3. Never let the stubble left after
grazing get more than 30 inches tall.
When it does, mow it back to a height of
6 to 8 inches. :

4. Move milking cows to the next
millet planting when it is 12 to 15 inches
tall and use the old planting for dry cows,

- calves, and heifers or let it grow tall for

silage. On well-fertilized land, you should
harvest 20 tons or more of silage per acre
from the early plantings of Gahi-1 after
grazing the crop for 3 to 4 weeks. Mow
the stubble back to 6 inches after the
last grazing if the millet is to be left for
silage and apply an additional 50 pounds
of nitrogen per acre unless the soil is very
fertile.

There is considerable research to in-
dicate that meat can be produced with
somewhat older and less succulent forage
than that required for top milk produc-
tion. The grass must be kept in a palata-
ble condition, however, so the animals
will consume enough to maintain their
life processes and also make good gains.
To supply this kind of forage with Gahi-1
cr Starr millet:

1. Plant in late April in the latitude of
Tifton. Make another planting in late
June or early July if you want grazing
through September. Growth will slow
down in August and September and more
acres will be required to produce the
same amount of forage.

2. Start grazing the first pasture when



FOR MILK, MEAT

the millet reaches a height of 12 to 15
inches. As soon as most of the leaves are
grazed off, move cattle to the second pas-
ture of the same planting. Since Gahi-1
grows very fast, it may be necessary to
move animals to the second pasture be-
fore the first is completely grazed in or-
der to keep the millet from getting too
tall (over 24 inches).

3. Stock heavily enough to keep the
millet grazed down but be sure there are
plenty of leaves to give the animals a
full feed at all times. They will not do
well if forced to graze stemmy material.

4. When stubble left after such graz-
ing gets more than 30 inches high, mow
it back to a height. of 6 to 8 inches. Then
allow new growth to reach a height of
18 to 24 inches before grazing again.

If you plan to feed green-chopped
Gahi-1 pearl millet, cut it, leaving a 6-
inch stubble every time it reaches a
height of 30 inches. Research reported by
H. A. Fribourg and V. Ramaiah, Tennes-
see Agricultural Experiment Station, at
the 1960 meetings of the American So-
ciety of Agronomy, indicates that this cut-
ting schedule will give the best seasonal
distribution of forage and will give yields
as good as, or better than, a number of
other cutting schedules tested. Although
the quality of the forage was not tested
with animals, it is believed that it would
be satisfactory for both meat and milk
production,

Although grazing or harvesting meth-

ods have the greatest influence on the :



A

quality and, hence, on the Pn
of animals utilizing millet, other mez

' agement practices cannot be ignored, Fi
search conducted at the Georgia Coasii

Plain Experiment Station in 1960 show
that 10 pounds of seed per acre, plant

in 24 to 36-inch rows, and 25 pounds
seed per acre, planted with a grain dr:

gave yields equal to those obtained fre
heavier seedling rates. Gahi-1 seed grov
in Arizona was used in this study. Se
grown in the southeastern United Stati

is usually lower in quality and heavi|
seeding rates might be required. Wh

only 100 pounds of nitrogen per ac
were used, row and grain-drill seedin

gave the same yields. Thirty-six-inch rq

plantings gave 16 to-32 percent less f
age than grain-drill and 24- inch rc

plantings on soil fertilized with 200 a

400 pounds of nitrogen per acre. The 2
inch-row planting yielded as well as t
grain-drill seeding method regardless

fertility level in this study. Since rc}
planting will permit cultivation and t}
- control of weeds, it is to be preferred

weedy soils.
Gahi-1 millet has

age purposes. To make top-quality sila
from Gahi-1, cut when the first heads a
pear, chop the grass fine, and mix thc
oughly with a preservative. Ground sn:
corn, added at the rate of 100 to 1
pounds per ton, is one of the best pr
servatives. Pack silage well in an ai
tight silo and cover with plas
out air and reduce spoil



consistently o1
yielded Starr and should be used for s}





)

p