Farmers
IBulletin
Commissioner
BA ; ATLANTA, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1960
ORS NOTE: The stored pea-
t problem is becoming more
re in Georgia. In view of increas-
mcern on the part of the peanut
try and agriculiural workers
.e peanut producing areas a spe-
mitiee recently made a study
oblem. Portions of the final
C om this committee with spe-
| recommendations for Sper the
isions of the. state seed law
doa better job of securing and
records on seed purchases.
purchasing seed farmers should
bill of sale or receipt showing
e of purchase, kind of seed and
ntity purchased and the lot number
seed. This record of purchase
be kept with the seed tag from
tainer in which the seed is pack-
handled,
surchased bad seed or that the seed
urchased was not of the correct
and are not able to back up their
with sufficient proof of pur-
such situations it is difficult or
sible to assist the farmer in set-
his complaint.
eceipt or bill of sale with the in-
nati listed above and accompanied
seed tag is sufficient proof of pur-
ould such proof ever be needed.
ecially important that the lot
on the bill of sale.
The purpose of the survey was to attempt
to define the scope of the problem, con-
tributing factors and possible solutions.
Most of those interviewed felt that
insects in stored peanuts became a real
problem about 1953 and have become
progressively worse. The participants
were almost unanimous in the opinion
that the problem was directly linked to
windrowing and combining,
With this relatively new method of
harvesting, peanuts are brought into
storage earlier. The nuts are not stacked
in the fields as they were previously and
exposed to the elements including cold
weather. It was felt that the combining
of the nuts often resulted in more crack-
ed pods and loose shelled kernels; the
type of peanuts that are most severely
damaged by insects.
Practically everyone involved in the
study felt that the initial insect infesta-
tions were brought into storage on or in
(Continued On Page 7)
often farmers complain that:
Agricultural
CALENDAR
October 12, Rural Life Building, Tifton
: Sweet Potato Short Course.
October 13, Rural Life Building, ABAC,
Tifton = Tobacco Short Course.
October 14, REA Building, Camilla - Tobac-
co Meeting.
October 17, National Guard Armory =
Valdosta - Tobacco Meeting.
October 18, South Georgia College, Doug-
las - Tobacco Meeting.
October 19, Courthouse in Waycross, Way-
cross = Tobacco Meeting.
October 20, Grammar School Auditorium,
Glennville - Tobacco Meeting.
October 21, Georgia Southern College,
Statesboro, - Tobacco Meeting.
October 23 - 25, University of Georgia,
Athens - Southeastern Feed Production
School.
NUMBER 5
pTTON SEED PRICE SQUEEZE
Demand Goes Down
Ginning Costs Up
Many farmers are concerned about
the price of cotton seed. The price has
gone down until most ginners are paying
only about $35 per ton for seed.
This is not a case of the ginners buy-
ing low and selling high. The ginners
themselves are caught in a price squeeze
and are making precious little profit on
cotton seed.
What has happened is simply that oth-
er oils have replaced cotton seed oil in
the manufacturing of most fats for hu-
man consumption, The market is bur-
dened by great quantities of soy bean
and other vegetable oils. Therefore, there |
is less and less use for cotton seed oil. This
is true to the extent that many cotton
oil mills in the South have been forced
to close.
In addition, ginners have been pres-
sured into purchasing new and expensive
equipment which has increased their cost
of operation so that they must increase
the price of ginning.
The ASC support price offered to gin-
ners for cotton seed through the Com-
_ modity Credit Corporation is $38 per ton
of 100 grade seed if the ginner has paid
at least $34 for each ton. However, this
support is pro-rated according to the grade
of seed and most cotton seed sold in Geor-
gia runs about 90 grade. Therefore, par-
ticipation in this program has not been
too active.
The lower price cannot be blamed on
farmers, ginners, or manufacturers. It
is a result of the over abundance of veget-
able oils on the market and the fact that
there is ne particular demand for cotton
seed oil - -
The increase in the cost of ginning and
the decrease in the demand - for cotton
seed oil has produced a situation where it
takes all or almost all of a bale of seed to
pay for the ginning of a bale whereas in
years past the cost to the farmer was
only about one-half of a bale.
Georgia, First:
w BROILERS @ PROTECTED FOREST LANDS @ PIMENTO PEPPER
@ PEANUTS @ IMPROVED PECANS
@ NAVAL STORES
a
PAGE TWO
MARKET BULLETIN.
ieoouis
Ee
PHIL CAMPBELL
GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
Editorial aud Executive Offices
Biate Agriculture Building
= 19 Hunter Street, . W.
Atlanta 3, Georgia
Phone JAckson 4-3292
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, any
commercial businessman, any
company or organization li-
censed as a commercial busi-
ness or doing business under
a trade name or _ business
name, nor from any _ indivi-
dual doing business under a
trade name or commercial
business name.
The Georgia Market Bulle-
tin assumes no 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-
tisement carried in any pub-
lication that is delivered
through the United States
mail,
Jack Gilchrist
Mailing Room Supt.
Editor
Assistant Editor
Notices Mrs. Eliza
Gaui slakivin $$$$ S izabeth Hynds
Published weekly at 114-122 Pace St., Covington, Ga.,
by Georgia Department of Agriculture. Entered as second
class matter Aug. 1, 1937, at post office, Covington,
under Act of June 6, 1900. Accepted for mailing at special
rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act of Oct. 8,
___. Vernon Ayers
~ Mrs. LaMyra Jarman
. Candler Clement Jr.
Ga.,
Address all complaints to
1917.
_ Address requests to be added to or removed from
mailing list, changes of address, ete, to CIRCULATION
MANAGER. Market Bulletin, Atlanta. All requests for
change of address must include OLD and
Address all notices and advertisements to EDITOR OF
NOTICES, Market Bulletin, Atlanta.
NEW addresses.
EDITOR, Market Bulletin.
FLOWERS
FOR SALE
Large and small Boxwoods,
ifferent sizes and _ prices;
antanas, large blooming size,
50c clump; Honey suckle vine,
swet scented flowers, 3, 50c;
old fashion Weeping Mary,
25e bunch; Josephs Coat,
mixed colored Lemon lilies,
50c doz. Per 93. Add postage.
rs. Presley Fowler. Rt. 2,
Ellijay.
Summer blooming Cushion
ums, mixed col., $1. doz.;
arge type Fall Mums, all col.,
$2. doz.; hardy purple Or-
hids, blooming size, 50c ea.;
large type Iris, Bronze or pur-
ple, 50ce ea.; Dutch Iris, pur-
ple, $1. doz. bulbs. Per. No.
- No order less $1. filled. All
del. Mrs. Adell Williams, Rt.
2, Ellijay. -
Strong, well rooted Giant
Admiral Byrd Daisy plants,
24-30 in., blooms up to 5 in.
dia. $1.30 doz.; 25, $2.25; $6.-
75 C; lavender Stokesias,
dbl. white Spice Pinks, $1.75
doz. PP in Ga. State Inspect-
ed. Per. No. 176. Mrs. O. S.
ee eeu 2869 Church St.,
ast Point.
Yellow with pink Lantanas
5, 50c, small Nandenas, 35c
oo Corncob Cactus; Baby
erns 25c bunch; seed mixed,
Larkspur, Evening Primrose,
mixed Sweet Williams, Pop-
pies, pink, 25c tbls. Plant in
Nov. for next years bloom-
ing, add postage. Per. No. 53.
rs. Lizzie Crawford, 18
Crawford St., Ellijay.
8 colors Cannas, $1. doz.;
Daylilies, seedlings of fine
var., 25c ea; Amaryllis, Milk
nd Wine Lilies, Umbrella
alm, 25c ea; Daffodils, Nar-
cissus, and Tuberoses, 50c
doz. Per. No. 44. Add postage.
Mrs. W. E. Wooten, Rt. 2, Box
150, Camilla.
Trailing Coleus cuttings, 10,
$1.00; Boston Ferns, 50c
bunch; Iris Lilies, dark pur-
ple, $1.50 doz. Per. No. No. 99.
iss Georgia Winkles, Ray-
mond.
_ Rooted house plant cutt-
ings, my _ selection, 20, $1.;
well rooted Boxwoods, 6, $1.-
25; white Madonna Lilies and
pink and white Peonies, 50c
ea. Add 25 postage on ea.
order. Per No. 88. Mrs. J. H.
Gable, Rt. 3, Cedartown.
Mixed bulbs, Jonquils, But-
tercups, yellow Narcissus, $1.
G: Emperor, Empress, dbl.
Daffodils or Butter and Eggs,
3 doz. $1.; Paper White Nar-
cissus, 50 doz; Boston, Fish-
tail, and Tree Ferns, 3, $1.;
blue Plumbago, 50c ea. Per.
No. 36. Add postage. Mrs. J.
R. Hinson, Box 104, Chester.
_ Double orange Hemerocal-
lis, 3 doz. $1.; large white
Clematis roots, 2 yr. old
Sweet shrub and Wisteria
roots, each 3 for $1.; Mont-
bretia bulbs, 10c doz. Per. 59.
Add postage. Mrs. L. S.
Brown, 1321 Wildwood Ave.,
Columbus.
ae te See Re eres ot
Perennial white Candytuft,
extra large plants, 20c ea.,
$2. doz.; Admiral Byrd dai-
sies, $1.50 doz.; choice mixed
Daffodil bulbs, $1. C.; dbl.
white flowering peach, Ger-
bera Daisy, 5, $1.; Mammoth
white violets, 2 doz., $1. Per.
No. 49. Add 35c postage. Mrs.
J. W. Jones, Madison.
_Many colors Hybrid Day-
lilies, no common ones mix,
$1.50 doz.; Sev. colors. Per.
Phlox, not labeled, mixed, 4
good clumps, $1.; many col-
ors fine Iris mixed, no old
whites, $1.25 doz. Per. No. 2.
Mrs. C. H. Tanner, 1807 Vin-
son Hwy., Milledgeville.
Blue, white Siberian Iris,
Shasta Daisies, Narcissus,
Jonquils, 25 doz.; Red Hot
Poker 25c and 50c; Butterfly
bush, Almonds, red Woods-
bine, Spirea, Anthony Water-
er, Rose blooms, 25c; Azalea,
Rose cuttings, 10c Red China-
berry 50c, Wild Honeysuckle,
10c. Per. No. 54. Mrs. Tom
Harkins, Mountain City.
Beefsteak and Angel Wing
Begonia, Mother-in-law Ton-
gue, and Chinese and African
Evergreen, 25c each: Baby
Breath Spirea. Add Postage,
Per. No. 63, Mrs. Annie Hub-
bard, Fortson, Per. No. 63,
Lilacs, white 50c, lavander,
25e, pink, white grass pinks,
10c, 8, 25; 5 colors Daylilies,
Lemon, Tiger, 10c, 3, 25;
Rose of Sharon, Spring Glory,
Forsythia, 25c; Chrysanthe-
mums, Drakeshead, 25c doz.
Clematis, 10c lavender, red,
rose Horsement, 5c. Per. No.
55 Varilla Quarterman,
Mountain City.
Pink, Cherokee Rose, Mt.
Laurels; Rhododendrons, red,
yellow Azaleas; white Pine,
Holly, Dogwood, Sweetshrub,
Poplars, Maples, Crabapple,
all 2-3 ft. moss packed, $2.75
doz.; Phlox, violets, Fall
Pinks, blue Iris, Daylilies,
Snowdrops, $2.50 C. Mrs.
Bonnie Abercrombie, Mineral
Blubb, Per. No. 112.
Tris, 50, $1.00; Jonquils,
200, $1.00; pink Cannas, 25c
ea.; Geraniums, 6 rooted, $1;
white, yellow narcissus, 50c
doz. Add postage. Mrs. Lester
Phillips, Rt. 1, Royston. Per-
mit No. 145.
Boston Ferns, giant green
leaf Caladiums and_ rooted
pink Cannas, 50c ea.; rooted
maple Leaf Begonia, 25c ea.;
Spider Lily bulbs, $1 doz.; dbl, | Chin
red, pink and large, pointed,
speckled leaf Begonia, red and
salmon Sultana cuttings, 15c
ea. Per. No. 79. Add postage.
Mrs. Lee Cromer, Rt. 1, Roy-
ston.
Begonias: Peperomia, Dev-
ils Backbone, Naked Truth
and pink dbl. Begonias, Sul-
tana, pink, rose and orange
Century plant, small Nandina
and blue Butterfly, all, 8, $1.
Per. No. 172. Add_ postage.
Mrs. P. E. Traylor, Rt. 2, Re-
becca.
Red, tall green leaf Can-
nas, Iris, asst. colors, $1.00
doz.; African Violets, asst.
cols., large, $1.00, small, 50c;
May, Christmas and Thanks-
giving Cactus, Sultanas, Asst.
cols., 50 ea. rooted. Per. No.
22. Mrs. H. G. Aderhold, Rt.
3, Sparta.
Cacti: Thanksgiving, Christ-
mas, Peanut, Golden Stars,
Cinnamon, Angel Wing, Rice
and Frogleg, rooted, 20c ea;
cuttings, 10c ea. pink Thrift,
mixed col. Coleus, red Gizzard
and Josephs Coat. Per. No. 35.
Add 15 postage. Mrs. D. W.
Faircloth, Box 32, Seville.
Old fashion dbl. pink Hya-
cinth bulbs, extra large and
medium, blooming size, 8, $1;}.
large size Madonna Lilies, 6,
$1. Per. No. 12. Add postage.
Mrs. R. H. Whelshel, Rt. 3,
Dawsonville. '
Mixed Iris, 25, $1.00; April
blooming Narcissus and mixed
Fall bulbs, $1.00 C. Mrs. John
Weaver, Rt. 2, Temple, Per.
No. 169.
Rosebud Begonias,
plants, Rabbit Tracks, Polka
Dot and pink For-get-me-nots,
each 4, $1.25; Royal Poinciana,
Wax leaf Ligustrum (10 in.),
pink- Mullein, Boston Daisies
and strawberry Begonia, each,
6, $1.25; Grand Duke Jasmine,
2; $%.252: Per Nos 242 Mer s.
Lawrence McAvoy, Rt. 1, Box
323, Washington.
Daylilies, 3, $1.00; mixed
Iris, names lost, $1.00 doz.;
Iris: Tea Rose, China Maid,
Golden Russet, Katherine Gay,
Mulberry Rose, Blue Rhythm,
Patrice, Mount Timp, Golden
Lakes, Cherie, Lavender and
Old Lace,-and pinks, 50c ea.
$5.00 doz. Per No, 20. Add 50c
postage. Mrs. J. M. Griffin,
Rt. 1, Washington.
Daylilies: 125 dif.,. Prima
Donna, $2.00; Marie Wood,
Daafu, $2.50; Revolute, Maid
Marion, Evelyn Claar, Pink
Prelude, $1.00; Narauga, Ka-
napoha, Painted Lady, Mis-
sion Bells, 50c; Iris; Pink Sen-
sation, Melody Lane,
Carnival, 75c; New Snow, Sa-
ble, Chantilly, Lady Mohr,
50c. Per. No. 19. 40c postage.
Mrs. F. M. Combs, Washing-
ton.
Philippine Lily seed, 40c C;
Iris; 100 dif., Violet Harmony,
Maytime, Limelight, Happy
Birthday, Cliffs of Dover, 5,
$6; Daylilies: Ruffled Pina-
fore, Pink Petticoats, Garnet
Robe, Bowknot, Red Velvet,
75 ea.; Plum Mist, Russell,
Rose Gem, 50c; White, dbl.
Feverfew. 12, 75c. Per. No.
154. Postage 40c. Mrs. M. P.
Combs, Washington.
Phlox, asst. colors,
Velvet;
color| q
Dbl. and sinble African Vico
lets, white, pink and blue, 50c
ea. and up. Will not ship; also,
Woodsia Fern, 50c ea. or 3,
$1.25. Per. No. 80. Mrs. C. W.
Bradford, Tignall.
Adm. Byrd Daisies, $1.00 C;
Blue Thrift, $1.50 C; white
Iberin Candytuft seed, 25c
teaspoonful and stamped en-
velope. Per. No. 120. Mrs. Lon
Ashworth, Rt. 1, Dacula.
Daylilies: Pink Charm,
Honey Redhead, Mt. Hope,
Mt. Vernon. J. T. Russell,
Frances Russell, Mrs. Bonner,
Black Prince, Purple Haze,
Betty Slick, Linda, Orange
Blaze, Russells Mint, Lou-
dan, dbl. Orange, Viking, 6,
ar Bearded Iris, named, 8,
1.; Liriope, 3 doz., $1.; Per.
18. Postage, 35c. Mrs. W. E.
Johnson, Rt. 2, Crawfordville.
Begonias, Rex., $1.; Thur-
stoni, Angel Wing, Guinea
Wing, 60c; Calif. Rubber and
Polka Dot plants, Shrimp,
Rainbow Moss, Peperomia,
Boston, Leather Leaf, Spren-|C
geria, Asparagus, Maidenhair,
Fish Scales Ferns, 50c;
Thanksgiving, Xmas Cactus,
inese Evergreen, Alumi-
num plants, Moles Foot, 45c.
Per. No. 65. Add postage. Mrs.
Otis Mashburn, Cumming.
Star of Bethlehem bulbs,
40c doz., 4 doz., $1.35; nice
boxwoods, reasonable, hardy
$1. doz.;
assortment of pot plants, 15
different nice plants and cuts,
$3. PP. Per No. 106. Mrs. Ed
Se Rt. 2, Box 105, Adairs-
ville.
Strong Admiral Byrd daisy
plants, damp packed, $1. doz.,
25, $2.; Add 15c postage on
orders both in or out of state.
Per. No. 157. Mrs. Ruth S.
Haynie, Rt.. 2, Box 469, Au-
gusta, Ph. RE. 6-8349.
Thrift, Dixie Brilliant, dark
and bright red, white, deep
pink, pink-white eye, lue, lilac,
one cent ea. for cuttings for
Oct. setting; 4c for rooted
divisions; 10c, 25c, 50c, 75c and
$1. clumps. Cellophane moist
wrapped. PP. Out state, 50c
extra. Per. No. 97. Mrs. Z.
D. Dodd, Rt. 1, Box 223, Al-
pharetta.
Fine mixed Iris, sky blue,
yellow, orchid, purple and
many two tones, $1.50 doz.
Per. No. 66. Mrs. J. M. Mc-
Guire, Rt. 2, Adairsville.
English Boxwood, all sizes,
from 50c up. Per. No. 114.
Mrs. L. R. Hartley, 566 Col-
lier Rd., N. W., Atlanta 18,
Ph. TR 6-4485.
Daylilies: 130 dif., free ex-
tras. David Jackson, 7 in. red-};
apricot $20; brown Orchid,
$15.00.; Temple Bells, $6.00;
Ebony Prince, $4.; Green
Gladioli, $3.50; Hearts Afire,
$1.50; Pink Prelude, Dream,
Bowknot 50c; Vesper Iris
(summer bloom) 50c. Per. No.
101. Walter M. Jackson, 1123
Vickers St. S.E., Atlanta 16.
Swiss Pansy, $1.85 C; fine
Iris Daylilies, Privet hedge,
Shamrock; sweet Violets, Jon-
quil bulbs, 3 doz., $1.; Candy
Stripe Verbena, 15, $1.; Chry-
santhemum blooms, 50c up
doz.; Roses 2 yr. old, bloom-
ing now, 3, $4.25 Per No. 137.
Add postage. Fred Wither-
spoon, 308 Holderness St., S.
W., -Atlanta10, Phi. Pl 32
525:
Approx. 500 nice young
Boxwoods, fast growing, 1957
planted extra well rooted, dif.
sizes, sell cheap. No Sunday
sales. No mail orders. Locat-
ed 7 mi, N. of Blairsville. Mrs.
Ellis E. Hemphill, Rt. 3, Box
145, Blairsville, Per. No. 56.
Truck load Boxwood, 1 to
5 ft. dia., bargain priced; 2:
yr. Chinese Chestnut seed-
lings, Forsythia, Almond, Hy-
rangea, Nandinia, Crab,
Crepe Myrtle, Althea, Spirea,
Tamarix, at my home; color-
ful Rex, Lettuce deaf; Old
red, white; pink wax Be-
gonia, 50c ea., 4 asst. A. vio-
lets, $1.25. Mrs. B. J. Can-
trell, Blue Ridge, Per. No. 52.
Irish Jumpers, sixteen 6 -
8 in.; Douglas Fir, 5, 8 to 10
in., rooted cuttings, 50c ea.;
Trailing or running Junipers.
rooted, 75c ea.; Lillies, Paint-
ed Lady, 50c; Hyperion, 35c;
-|+well rooted Acuba,
Violets, Royal |
Calif. purple, 30, $1.
blue Hyacin hs, 20,
Daffodils and Snowdrop bu
2 doz. $1. Per. No. 75. Add 3
postage in Ga. No less $1
ders filled. Mrs, R. P. Si
heimer, Brooks. s
Tom Thumb, Kalanchoe,
ange Red, Winter Bloc
60c ea. and Stephonatis
dy vine) 3, $1.00. Add =
PP: Per: No: 74;
Clower, Rt. 3, La
Rooted Trailing Coleu
striped and gizzard
deep pink, salmon pale
purple Sultanas, 10e ea.
Sword, Maiden Hair fern
35c ea.; 9 dif. Cactus cut:
dark, bright red, rosebud, red
white, salmon; dbl.
cuts, white, pink Oxalis,
pod pepper plants, I
Lawrenceville. aot
King Alfred Jonquils, _
.; Narcisus, $2. C; June L
$1. ea.; pink Thrift,
variegated Roses, 3, 2!
Fashion Sunflower
head, 25c; pink Almond bus
es, 1 head, 25c. Add
Mrs. Florence Leathe
1, Buchanan, Per. No.
Flower seed: hardy
Peas, pink, dark pink f
white, Plant now for flowers |
next spring. 25c for 1 tbls. and
postage; Bird of Paradis
seed, 25c plus 4c Pe
stamp. Mrs. T. M. Rando
2107 a Claymore Dr., Marietta.
Dbl. yellow cannas, mixed
color Fall Pinks, 50 doz od
mixed color Dahlias, $1.25
doz., Pink Thrift, 50c C., root- _
ed sprigs, damped packed.
Add postage, 33c on_ first
pound. No stamps or checks.
Per. No. 119. Pairlee Rundles, _
Rtz. 7, Gainesville 5: 3, cee
Dbl. Pink, and Blue Grape
Hyacinths and Blue Iris Bulbs,
40c doz., all color Chrysanthe-
mums, $1.00 doz.; white and
yellow Narcissus and yellow
Jonquil bulbs, 25 doz. Add
postage. Ethel Crowe, Rt. 2,
Gainesville, Per No. r
Ligustrum, Cherry Laur
$1.50 doz., $10 C; Wht. C
tuft, dwarf blue Per. P.
$1.50 doz., $7.50 C.; Phi
Blackberry, Red Spider,
Atamasco and day lilies,
ce Minor and English Ivy, $1
doz., $5 C. Per No. 139. Blan-
che Woodruff, Greenvill :
Ox,
ed, 8 - 10 in., $20 C
RopiNROES Greenville,
Daylilies: Linda, Redhea
Mrs. Wyman, Mary er
Purple Waters, Seven |
Betty Ann, 25c ea.;
Warpath, Skylark, |
Russell, Mrs. John J. Ligert
Buster Brown, 50c ea., damp
packed, correctly lab
Mrs. Claude E.
wassee, Per. No. 142.
Single White Hyacinth
bulbs, $1.25 doz. plus
Mrs. G. A. Wynens,
FLOWERS
FLOWERS (Wanted a) _
Want some Tritoma or Red _
Hot Poker bulbs. State price.
Mrs. Hugh Eidson, Rt. 2, Box
33; Newhan.: 5 3 as. ee
Want some nice Butter and
Eggs (double Daffodils) bulbs.
State what you %
have and ~
price. Mrs. Zachary, 3256 Se-
minole Ave., Macon.
Want Regale and Easter
Lily bulbs, bloo 5 se
State price and best ree
plant. G. C. Patterson, Rt. 4
Smyrna. : ; :
Want some seed of the e
perial Japanese Morning Glo-
ry, also some fresh
the- Cucumber Tree.
R. Tippins, Claxton.
te
Milk and Wine 20c. Postage} wood
paid on $2.00 orders and up.
Per No. 11. Mrs. Lona Tallent, | cash
Lula,
Ab 7
~ children,
old 2 children, 16 and
(girls), wants job on poultry
;
Ted, pale
- and
retired flower grower, M. G.
- Smith, Toccoa.
or tractor.
_ See or write. O, O. Turner, Rt.
: A Holebrooke Camp Ground
_ types farming and cattle.
_ tending to layers. Need 3 R.
FLOWERS
Want some Crape -. Myrtle,
pink and white.
Want the small and medium
sizes. State prices. Mrs. R. P.
Pickens, Jr., Lilburn, Ph. TH-
38-3582.
FARM WORK
WANTED
Lone man wants crop on
50-50 basis at once. No cot-
ton. Can do dairy and truck
farm work also. Well experi-
enced. Want with good man
for long time job. Have to be
moved and furnished to make
crop, or for a living wage.
rge R. Morrow, 606 Gas-
_ kill St. S. E. Atlanta 16.
Want job on farm. Can drive
truck and tractor, but cant
drive on the Hwy. Sober.
Want room and board and to
come home every two weeks.
W. M. Tukes, Rt. 4, Box 90,
: Reynolds.
Want place with reliable
party to raise pigs for market
on 50-50 basis. References.
Need as much as 4 acre pas-
ture and small house to live
in. If interested write and will
come see. L. M. Turner, P. O.
x 455, Folkston.
Want dairy job. 3 yrs. Exp.
Need furnished house. Wife
self only. John Albert
Sprayberry, 588 Dunn S&t., S.
W. Atlanta 10.
__ Want job looking after lay-
ing hens, a_ few friers, or
owing chickens, flowers,
_ Vegetable, feeding hogs (not
for market but just for the
~ home). 2 in family, wife and
self, both 72 yrs. old and
Want job on farm. Know
how to work men. Exp. cat-
tle, row cropping and any
kind farm machinery. Honest,
dependable and sober, R. O.
_ Foskey, Rt. 1, Dudley.
Want job on cattle or hog
_ farm, or as Caretaker. Have
own income. Can drive truck
Ref. if required.
Cumming.
Man 50, wife, 47,
straight time job on chicken
farm, seeing after layers and
broilers; would consider cat-
tle farm. 5 yrs. exp. on cattle
farm; also consider dairying.
- Both work. No children. Hon-
est and trustworthy. Can give
- good Ref: Owen M. Kittle, Rt.
_ 4, Covington.
Married man, 45 yrs. old, 2
1 and 4 yrs. old,
see
Can
drive truck and tractor. Can
give references. Want reason-
able wages. W. M. Coursey,
751 Washington St., S. W. At-
2 lanta 15.
Middleaged white woman
wants job, raising poultry or
wants job on farm. Exp
house, wired for electric stove.
Have to be moved at once.
Have my own furniture, Can
s good Ref. Letters ans.
rs. Grace C. Wilbur, Rt. 2,
Cartersville.
White lady, widow, 32 ae
farm at once. Mrs. Mildred
Mason, 1907 Walker St., Au-
SS oe
Refined, unencumbered wo-
man, past middleaged, desires
light farm work on farm, with
elderly woman or couple. Can
give Ref. Average salary ex-
ected. Mrs. Francis Williams,
75 Georgia Ave., S. E. At-
lanta 15.
White, middleaged, married
man needs job at once, care-
taker or dairy work. Need
house furnished with furni-
ture, inc. refrigerator. Want
living wage, according to
work. Can do farm work. Pre-
fo having one day off a week.
ave to be moved. Dee Grin-
le, Rt. 3, e/o W. T. Maman,
| Wednesday, October 12, 1960
| ing,
38 yr. old man with wife, no
children, wants job on cattle
farm or poultry. Exp. paint-
g, carpenter and gen. re-
pair work, Am neither drink-
er nor drifter. Fred C. Koane,
Station G, Atlanta.
White man, 46, wife and 5
children, oldest boy 16, want
job helping gather crop by
day for bal. of year, and want
2 H. crop for 1961 on 50 -50
basis. Can drive tractor and
truck. Must have 5 R. house.
Have to be moved at any time.
Ruben Morgan, 612 - 35th St.
Columbus.
51 yr. old white woman
wants job for farm work. Can
do most any kind of work.
Home and $15.00 to $20.00
week. Miss Eva Hill, Rt. 1,
Temple.
FARM HELP
WANTED
Want sober, reliable, hon-
est experienced tobacco man
(for permanent place) with
ample equipment to cultivate
300 acres on 50 - 50 basis for
miles from town with ample
1961. Farm located 3-1/2
electrical power. House wired
for all electrical appliances.
B.-f, Hicks, -P; . Box: 206,
Wrightsville.
Want white, nice, healthy
woman, 40 - 60 yrs. old to
help with very light farm
work, at once. Claud W. John-
son, Rt. 1, Conyers
Want unencumbered refin-
ed, settled, country white wo-
man to live with couple and
help with light farm work on
farm. No heavy work. Room
and board and reasonable sal-
ary. Mrs. J. E. Proctor, Rt. 3,
Jackson.
Want settled, mature white
woman, unencumbered, to live
in permanently. Light farm
chores including household
chores. 3 in family. Answer
immediately to above address.
Mrs. L. W:. Pierson, 2567
Amelia Ave., Decatur.
Want working manager un-
der 48 yrs. old, with smali
family for large farm. Exp.
in row crop farming. gen. farm
repair work and willing to
work self and have exp. in
working other men. No drink-
ers nor drifters. Good house,
elec. plumbing, school bus
route. Give age, number and
age of children, Exp. ref. in
= Wayne Seaman, Hobo-
en.
Want farm hand with small
family for work farm. Steady
work. 4 R. house on school
bus Rt. No drinkers. Give
Ref. Write. Jack Willis, Rt. 2,
Folkston.
Want man and wife to live
on my place. Plenty of good
land and some day labor.
Right couple will never have
to move, just someone to care
for place. Sam E. Poole, Wal-
nut Grove Road. Oxford.
Want middleaged white wo-
man to live on farm, look af-
ter chickens and 2 cows, and
do housekeeping. No heavy
work. Electric utilities. Room,
board and small salary. Mrs.
L. H. Curtis, Rt. 1, Rabun Gap.
EQUIPMENT
FOR SALE
Disston one man chain saw
i $50
: W. Young, RFD 4,
Dallas, Ph. 447-7041.
20 disc smoothing harrow,
$40.00; also Big Four John
Deere mowing machine, horse
drawn with short Complete
for tractor, $25.00. A. J, John-
son, Grayson, Ph. TH. 3-3874
(Lawrenceville).
Ford button saw, with belt,
3 point hitch, good as new,
$40.00. 3 miles West Hawkins-
ville on Hwy 26, B. D. Brown,
eit Hawkinsville, Ph. 2-
_141 Int'l. harvester com-
bine, two headers, 12 ft. small
grain and trio roe corn, used
very little and in good cond.,
$5,250.00. Ben H. Boatright,
Vidalia, Ph. 4934.
24 used Oaks waterers for
chickens for sale. Otis Gooch,
Rt. 2, Jefferson.
1946 Chev, 1-1/2 ton truck,
fair cond. less flat body, looks
good, $175.00; 3 roller Chat-
tanooga No, 12 cane mill not
used very much since new
boxings put in, $50,00; 2 disc
plow fits Super A Farmal,
good cond., mounted on rub-
ber tire, $100.00. Marcus
Beall, Rt. 3, Hazlehurst.
Stroke Pump, (complete)
tank, pump rod, clyd., screen
(used 3 mos.) $65.00. D re w
Morgan, Rt. 5, Box 316, Daw-
son.
1958 Int'l. 230 tractor plan-
ters and cultivators, hill drop-
ing attachments for cotton,
used very little D. H.
Kenerly, Covington, Rt.
4, Ph. 6660.
29 wood hen nests, 8 and
9 hole, 20c ea.; 10, ten hole
metal nests, $60.00 for lot; 18
plastic egg baskets, $1.25 ea.;
one egg cooling unit 48 case
cap. 5 yr. warranty, used one
yr., $125.00; one egg room au-
tomatic heater, $20. E. W. Le-
mon Jr., Rt. 1, Acworth, Ph.
WE 4-6634.
No. 3 three roller cane mill
for sale or exchange for year-
ling, Duroc gilt, or would ac-
cept 50 white leghorn pullets,
3 - 6 mos. old. R. S. Deen, Rt.
1, Alma.
500 gal. under ground Bu-
tane tank, .$175.00. I. W.
Nance, Rt. 2, Mableton. Ph.
SY 4-8633 (Atlanta).
1953 Farmall tractor cul-
tivators, Cole planter, distri-
butor, bottom plow, harrow,
disc stalk cutter, Fowler plow,
transplanter trailer mule
drawn plows. 14 - 63 Syracuse
turn plow, 25 - 35 middle-
buster, Walking cultivator, disc
turn plow, double stock, good
cond. Cheap for cash. Tho-
mas Rowe, Rt. 1, Glennville.
1940 John Deere H. trac-
tor can be put in good cond. at
reasonable cost; also John
Deere harrow and disc tiller
in good cond. sell three pieces
for $135.00; shallow well jet
pump and tank, good cond.,
$60; also 1 horse wagon, $25.
Angie Stevenson, Rt. 2, Mc-
Rae, Ph. 8818.
Shop equipment, heavy type
Anvil and Vise with an elec-
trie forge, $75.00. Mrs. Ray
Wesley, Rt. 1, Rockbridge Rd.,
Lithonia.
TD-18A with Angledozer,
good tractor with good Walk-
ing Gear, $2,740.00. B61 Mack
tractor also very good and
good rubber, cheap for cash.
Robt. H. Tootle, Reidsville,
Ph, 2151.
Horse Drawn McCormick No.
6 mower and rake in_ good
cond. $75.00; Cole No.
grain drill in good cond., $20.
James W. Garrard, Sr., Rt. 1,
Powder Springs, Ph. 943
5104 after 7 P. M.
1960 Ford Diesel tractor
used less than 350 hours, one
Bush Hog cultivator, Taylor-
way bushing bog harrow. Glen
J. Manning, 2091 Mt. Vernon
cewn Dunwoody, Ph. GL. 7-
2530.
Gravely garden tractor, cul-
tivators, rotary plow, 30 in.
rotary mower, and rototiller
and brush saw, $300.00. W.
A. Blackwell, 2122 Brockett
Rd., Tucker, Ph. Hi. 3-9145.
1955 Farmall 2 row super
C tractor, planters, cultivators,
sub-soiler, John Blue 6 row
cotton duster, Talorway
Athens 8 disc harrow, good 2
wheel trailer on springs, hitch
frame, all steel, 3 point hook
up with tractor, good cond.,
no junk. Reasonable price. Ro-
bert. Lee Campbell, Rt. 2, Box
76, Temple.
Two John Deere tractors, A
and B model. Can be seen at
my home. Julius Gabriel, Win-
terville Smithonia Road,
Winterville, Ph. RI. 2-5783.
Allis Chalmers tool bar,
used 40 hrs., works with
Allis Chalmers tractors with
3 point hitch, rear mounted
2 row Cole planters, works
with AC with 3 point hitch,
also on Ford and Ferguson
tractors; set of Allis Chalmers
CA cultivators for 2 row trac-
tor. Used 1 season, Reasonable
price. W. G. Ison, Brooks,
MARKET BULLETIN
1953 Farmall cub, cultiva-
tor, planters, distributors and
harrow, $600.00; Farmall F
30 steel tires on rear and
rubber on front, good shape,
$300. Ben J, Beall, Rt. 2, Ha-
zlehurst, Ph. FR 5-2824.
2 complete sets of Farm
Master elec. milkers and
pump. J. E. Chamlee, 523
Burnett Ferry Rd. Rome.
1951 J. D. tractor with
power-o-matic front end,
starter, lights, excellent cond.,
also nearly new 8 disc bush
and bog Talorway harrow,
heavy duty and smoothing
drag harrow, $1,200.00. Some
cattle taken in trade. Willie
eet Rt. 2, Buford. Ph, 434-
5618.
John Deere grain drill, for
sale. Aubrey Kendrick, Rt. 2,
Barnesville, (near Antioch
Church).
Bulk milkkeeper tank 180
gal. cap., good as new; Mar-
low milking outfit, 2 units -
extra pail, hot water heater,
galvanized wash vat, stainless
steel strainer, can rack, Milk
base with Foremost Dairys
also 1959 Farmall Cub trac-
tor, used less than 100 hrs.
with planters, cultivators and
side disc plow. L. C. Miller,
Rt. 2, Temple.
U. D. 18 Int'l. motor, 118
H. P., good cond., cheap; pair
of wagon scales, 10,000 Ib.
cap.; 2 mules; two horse wa-
gon, cultivator, stalk cutter,
arsenic machine and plow
tools all in good cond. W. J.
Harrison, Harrison, Ph. 399 M
2 (Tennille)
4 electric brooders in good
shape, 500 cap., $40.00. Fred
Pay, Rt. 1, Ollie Simpsons
Farm, Duluth.
Egg cooler, 6 cases plus,
made from Jamesway incu-
bator with Big Dutchman unit
model 25 R; also 500 chick
size McKomb brooder; also
feeders and waterers, Will
sell separately. H. Merrick, Rt.
4, Cuthbert.
3 roller Golden can mill,
in good cond.; also small eva-
porator. pan. Cheap. Milo
Smith, Dublin.
Super C Intl. tractor hy-
draulic system, planters, fer-
tilizer hoppers, cultivating
equipment, peanut plows, and
other minor farming equip-
ment for tractor, all for 2 row
farming. Good cond. recently
overhauled and painted, $900
complete. Lester Varn c/o
Pine Knol] Plantation, Rt. 3,
Box 530, Albany.
Cub tractor hay rake, $45;
power pulley, $22.50; leveling
and grading blade, $45.00;
cub-3 spring tooth field cul-
tivator, $50.00. All new cond.,
used only few times; also want
4|small grain drill, near Clarks-
ton. Contact. H. L. Wilson,
4633 Ridge Dr. Pine Lake. Ph.
HI 3-6140.
248 wire cages complete
with waterers, feeders and
hangers, $115.00 or 50 ea.
Can be seen my place at
Breeze Hill Road. Leonard H.
Lifsey, Rt. 1, Box 596, Augus-
ta. Ph. RE 3-8374.
PAGE THREE
Bulk milk tank, Wilson, 250
gal. cap., $1,000. R.J. Couns
cil, Blythe, Ph. Ly 2-3868.
Farmall 2, C-11, Corn Snap=
er; 6 ft. 20 Disc. Tamdem
arrow; 2-C-151-2 disc turn
plows; 10 disc 7 ft. bush and
bog harrow; 8 disc 6 ft. bush
and bog harrow; 7 ft. rotar
hoe; equipment is all Farmal
and in good cond. J. R. Wat-
kins, Rt. 1, Box 10, Hawkins-
ville, Ph. Twilight 2-2422.
Two 3 hole grain drills,
mule drawn, $5.00 ea; on e
two row stalk cutter with 3
point hitch, $30.00; 7, single
stock beams, $1.00 ea.; one
Bermuda harrow, two section
for tractor, $15. G. L. Peek,
Sr., Box 390, Rt. 3, Griffin.
Two range creep feeders for
calves, 1000 Ib. feed cap. Feeds
6 - 12 calves, $100.00 ea. J.
B. Guthrie, Rt. 1, Duluth, Ph,
Norcross 3683.
Small bulldozer, H. G. 34
Oliver Cletrac, 4 cylinder,
bulldozer blade, hydraulic lift.
C. C. Duke, 2323 Adams Dr.,
N. W., Atlanta 18, Ph. Syca=
more 4-5486.
Cherry Burl 50 gal. stain-
less steel pasteurizer with
pump, pipes, motors, thermo-
meters, for opperations, all A-
1 cond.; two bottle filler and
capper; 19 x 42 in. Aerator
with covers, J. B. Bruce,
Homerville.
2 Allis Chalmers M crawler
tractors, one in operating
cond. and one for parts. W. R.
Turner, Rt. 2, Stockbridge.
Two horse wagon with two
wheels extra in fair cond., $10
cash. Willie T. Smith, Rt. 3,
Thomaston.
Incubator, 1500 eggs cap.,
per week, perfect operating
cond., $250.00 and you move
it, or trade for Rotary mower
in perfect cond. to fit Ford
tractor. H. R. Clarke, Rt. 2,
Covington, Ph. 6789
4 eylinder Intnl. -power
unit, in good shape, for sale
or swap for work oxen, oF
Guernsey bull of any age. J. L.
Ellis, Rt. 2, Hahira.
2 H. wagon, Thornhill, good
cond. See or call. Wilkie Ry-
lee, Rt. 1, Maysville.
Factory built stake body for
pickup truck, fit 1/2, 3/4 and
1 ton of all makes. Size 9 ft.
long, 7 ft. wide. Bargan, $25.
J. M. Cannafax, Zebulon. Ph.
egg-o-matic
LO 7-9708.
cag
cond., $75;
Electric
grader, A-1
Browers Ker. chick brooders,
500 cap. good cond. $50.00, or
sell separate. Drexel Weeks,
Rt. 3, Eastman.
Haban Corn Shucker and
sheller in new cond.,_ belt
drive on skids, $400 or trade
for Farmall A tractor. J. W.
Thompson, Ailey.
UD - 18 Sawmill complete
with Diesel motor; one O-1
Frick Sawmill complete; one
Edger, one Log Cart, one H,
Farmall tractor, one hitch.
Priced reasonable, and all in
excellent mechanical cond. T.
J. Powell Sr., Kite.
notices.
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS
The Market Bulletin staff has received a number of
vegetable and flower plant notices from persons who have
not complied with the new regulations governing such
No such notices will be accepted for publication in
the Bulletin unless such persons have requested a permit
and have had their operation inspected.
Those desiring further information on these regula-
tions are invited to write the....
EDITOR OF THE BULLETIN
Department Of Agriculture
At 19 Hunter Street, S. W.,
ATLANTA 3, GEORGIA
Ree cee He: par oe
Serra err ree centerarameerereer irra acs ve eect
=
x
for. W. F. Norris,
PAGE FOUR _ K LF
Want good, 4 wheel drive} Angus pull, reg., 3 yrs. anil 14
Jeep for reasonable cash price.| 4 mos. old, gentle, reasonably
H. J. Witmer, 12309 Whitej priced to prevent inbreeding,
Bluff Rd. Savannah. will exchange. R. P. Etheridge} Blue
FOR SALE Want 250 gal. cap. Propane Sioa eee
Post hole digger for J. D.
ractor, $65; one cut-off saw,
25; one Ford Drag Pan for
-point hitch, $50. M. D.
eauchamp, RFD 3, Conyers.
Covington Planter with fer-
pie trough, single row, no] 9978
rame, Never been used. Very
reasonable or trade for either
hain saw, beef calf, or mare
colt. Mrs. J. L. Bryant, Box
39, Rt. 2, Godby Rd., College
ark,
3 roller No. 15 Columbus
ane mill, converted into a
Power Mill by the use of cogs
and pulley. Mill complete with
ogs and pulley ready for use.
i H. Zipperer, Rincon, Ph.
A. 6-5540.
| EQUIPMENT
WANTED
Want 400 gal. milk tank
@nd pipe line milkers in good
gond. G. T. Anderson, Mid-
leton, Ph. No. Elberton 857
-3.
* Want chicken feeders either
6 ft. feeders or stove - pipe
ttype feeders. Would like rea-
sonable number at reasonable
price. Jack Segars, Rt. 1, Win-
ger, Ph, Winder 867- 2569,
Want to swap Ford hydrau-
re dump truck for farm trac-
1669 Syl-
yester Circle, Atlanta 16.
Want 3 oil brooders 1000
@ap. in good cond. and (4)
eoal heaters, med, or large
ize for chicken houses. Pre-
er brick lined. Dan Starnes,
t. 1, B 130 A, Calhoun.
_ Want 300 or 400 gal. farm
tank. Stainless steel exterior
nd interior with _ stainless
easuring stick and indicating
fhermometer. W.E. Tedder,
$185 Merrill Ave., S. W. At-
-ganta 10.
Want large tractor, any
pod if it has power enough
nd cheap. Prefer Intl, John
eere or Ford. H. B. Cain, Rt.
, Bethlehem.
Want post hole digger for
Sohn Deere 50 tractor, 1956
model. Donald W. Singleton,
i. D., 622 Candler Building,
Atlanta 3; Phe JA. 3=82322
Want new Holland
corn
_phucker and sheller in good
_ ond. and reasonable price. W.
p. Doss, Rt..3, Tifton.
_ Want 500 gal. Propane gas
eae near Palmetto. Harold C.
ort, 1342 Northview Ave.,
Poa E., Atlanta 6. Ph. TR 4-
Want bulk milk tank cooler,
plso want root-rake blade and
ush and bog harrow. State
rice and other particulars.
M. Patterson, Rt. 2, Box
B79, Douglasville.
Want engine in good cond.,
_ for Intnl T-20 crawler trac-
tor, or consider one in need
= repairs if block is good.
tate what you have and
rice. Cecil Barber, Rt. 1, Lu-
thersville.
Want wagon seat for either
or 2 H. wagon, or both.
tate what you have, price,
te. Mrs, Perry S. Hammond,
i951 Brannen Rd. SE, Atlanta
Want parts of or complete
tractor, suitable for parts, for
Caterpillar Diesel D 6. State
hat you have and_ price.
Games E. McLain, RFD 2,
est Point.
Want A. C. cultivator or
ermuda plow, one that can
e@ pulled behind tractor.
Thos. E. Baughcum, Hartley
mee Rd. Macon. Ph. SH 2-
Want used light smoothing
harrow, suitable to be pulled
yy Allis Chalmers B tractor,
good cond. and reasoriably
riced, A, F. Spears, Rt, 3,
Beacon.
Want 1948 to 1952 trac-
tor, prefer Ford, I. H. or A. C.,
with cultivators, dise plows,
ea B. & B. harrow. E.
. Estes, Rt. 1, Dawsonville.
ie Siena A ga ecgere s te B
gas tank. ontact. Wesley
Bearden, Rt. 2, Douglasville.
Ph. WH 2-2720.
Want stainless steel milk
tank, 300 or 400 gal., in good
cond., Reasonably priced for
cash, Lewis E, Jeter, P. O. Box
325, Grantville, Ph JU3-
Want a used V. A. C. Case
tractor for cash. W. P. Mize,
Rt. 3, Clarkesville.
Want two disc turning plow,
cultivators, 8 disc bush and
bog harrow, planters, in good
cond. for Ford tractor. Mark
Hicks, Rt. 1, Chatsworth.
Want good Ford tractor and
equipment, 1953 or later mo-
del. Frank C, Dysart, Rt. 3,
Cartersville.
LIVESTOCK
FOR SALE
Cattle
Reg. Angus bull, 15 mos.
old, Eleenmere, trade for like
Angus Bull or cow or sell;
also at service, Reg. Angus
bull $3. per head pasture for
cows, Located at Westwood
Farm, Rockmill Rd., just east
of Haynes Bridge Rd., Alpha-
retta. Mrs. West, Jr,
Atlanta, Ph. Bl 5-3937.
12 Reg. Angus brood cows,
$250. ea. 3 will calf, $300. ea.;
6 Reg. heifers open, $175. ea.;
3 grade cows, $150. ea. 1 with
calf $165. All Angus, best
bloodlines. H. O. White, 6900
Campbellton Rd., Atlanta aby
Ph. DI 4-2212.
15 nice Holstein heifers,
open, calfhood vaccinated,
from artificial bred, wt. 500-
700 lbs., $100. ~$160. Harry
West, Box 44, Adairsville, Ph.
SP. 3-3486.
Reg. polled hereford bull
calf, 6 mos. old, dark red in col.
with excellent body confor-
mation. Ideal 4-H or FFA
club calf. Britt Chandler, Jr.,
Watkinsville, Ph, SO. 9-3171.
Two reg. Holstein bulls, sir-
ot by ABS bulls, dams with
D HI A records. Used one
season, proven breeders, $450.
and $350. RiGk Reynolds, nae
3, Monroe.
Reg. Angus herd bull, 3 yrs.
old; 2 nice reg. Angus bulls,
8 mos. old. Reasonable. Will
trade, Lynn C. Stephens, Rt.
1, Marietta, Ph. 4280241.
Thirty choice purebred An-
gus heifers and bulls, from
seven to eighteen months old,
vaccinated for Bangs and
Blackleg. Eileenmere breed-
ing from to bloodlines.
Priced from $150., reg. in
buyers name. Robert Tf:
Witcher, Cave Spring Road,
Cedartown, Ph. 442J.
Heifer, 14 mos. old, half
Holstein and half Guernsey,
black and white, $100. Ernest
Loner, Providence Rd. Al-
pharetta. Ph. GR 5-4262.
Reg. Holstein bull, 23 mos.
old, from Top milk stock,
also Reg. poll White Face
bull, and grade Holstein heif-
ers. Car] E. Jernberg, Jr., Rt.
aoe: College Park. Ph. PO 6-
5 Reg. Guernsey bulls, de-
horned and ring in nose, 15-
28 mos. old, artificial blood-
lines and heavy spring Guern-
sey heifers. Reasonable prices.
F. H. Bunn, Midville.
White Face stock bull, Reg.
American Assn., and the Poll
Assn. 3 yrs. old. Sell or trade
to prevent inbreeding. 1 mi.
So. Belmont on Braselton Rd.
Hwy. 60. Howard McNeal, Rt.
2, Pendergrass.
Few Holstein and Jersey
springing lst calf heifers, CV,
T.B. tested, 1,000-1100 Ibs.
$175.-$275.; also 2 Reg. Hol-
stein bulls, A.B. sired out of
Top cows, 2 yrs. old, in top
breeding shape, Sell or trade
for heifers. R. G. Reynolds,
Rt. 3, Monroe. Ph. 8-4032.
ABS Shorthorn bull, 14
mos. old, halter Beet fine
animal. Contact. E HR ea
Oia okey Me Cleveland.
es of weaning ag
for age, ent. to Reg. Sow a]
ibbon winner, $10. ea. |
Billy Rhodes, Crawfordville.
14 mos. old reg. Angus bull,
$195, Del. and papers furn-
ished. C. N. McClure; Daw-
sonville, Ph. AM. 5-2268,
mos. old from tested . herd.
Sell or trade for reg. Guern-
sey bull of same quality; also
Reg. and tested Guernsey cow
fresh in with calf or without
calf. Benj. F. Harris, Rt. 1,
Lula, Ph. Lenox 4-3714.
Reg. white face Hereford,
Domino bull, 3 yrs. old with
papers; also several white
face cows, heifers, steers and
calves. Cheap for quick sale.
See at my farm. Hugh C.
Power, Lower Ros Rd., Rt. 3,
Marietta.
Reg. Guernsey bull calf, 4 1015
Choice Landrace and Duroc
breeding stock. J
bloodlines, treated, Reg. buy-
ers name. Wm, E. Lanier, Rt.
2, Box 84, Metter. Ph. Mu 5-
Cherry Red Duroc boar,
ready for light service, about
150 Ibs. 6 mos. old. See at
farm, 2 mi. West of Hwy, 41,
at old Houser site. J. H.
Donaldson Rt. 1, Fort Valley.
3 Reg. Poland China
brood sows, one male, and
eleven young gilts and males
ready to reg. in buyers name.
All disease free and from best H
bloodlines. Eugene Futch,
Lake View Farm, Statesboro |
Dbl. reg. polled Hereford
bulls, top bloodlines, 9 mos.
and older $150. and up. See
at farm. M. B. Carter, Wool-
sey, Ph. HO. 1-5041 (Fayette-
ville).
30 high producing Jersey
milch cows, 25 of them milking
now more than 60 gal. day;
also some equipment for sale.
W. S. Shields, Thomson, Ph.
552 R: 2;
Ph. 4-9137.
Little bone Black African
Guinea pigs. the stay-fat
kind, ready now. Located 6-
1/2 mi. So. on Hwy. 19, Wil-
son Carson, c/o Carsons
Guinea Hog Farm, Rt. 3, Box ]
371, Griffin. |
25 pigs, $10. ea, 4 brood
sows purebred, sub.-to reg.
Mrs. Ida Simmons, 4131 Rig-
gins Mill Rd., Macon, Ph.
Sherwood 2-1334:
Reg. Angus bulls, 1 yr.-old,
calfhood vaccinated, good ba-
by conformation, from clean
herd, guaranteed__ breeders,
$180. See at farm. F. W. Phil-
nesaw, Ph. 428-2959 (Ma-
rietta).
24 mostly Holstein heifers,
17 bred to Reg. Jersey male,
will drop calves before Jan.
1st. 7 not bred, but ready to
breed. Most of them calf hood
vaccinated. Cliff Haney, Rt.
5, Callaway Rd., Marietta,
Ph, 428-4567.
Three steers, wts. 3-4 hun-
dred lbs., half Angus. Sell or
trade for 3 heifers, Herefords
or Black Angus. R. O. White,
Box 695, Jonesboro, Ph,
Greenleaf 8-8348.
Reg,
Braham cow, bred,
$200.; reg. Braham white
heifer, bred, gentle, $150.;
also one female Burro, 6 mos.
old, $75. J. C. Otwell, Rt. Xs
Box 217; Pe waSs, Ph. AL
21
Satie
5 Hampshire brood sows;
also 32 Hampshire and Land-
race cross pigs, seven weeks
old Oct. 10. Russell McGuk-
in, Rt. 1, Bremen. Ph, .Lenox
7-3101 after 7 P.M.
Ten meat type feeder pigs,
$90. or $10. ea; also two}
brood sows, one extra large,
one average size, both to be
bred to Landrace male about
Oct. 10th. Male lLandrace
Yorkshire cross, around 400
Ibs., $40. G. W. White, Rt.
2, Marietta, Ph. 428-0244.
Six weeks old Duroc pigs,
elig. reg. in buyers name,
choice stock from FFA pig
chain. Won Grand Champion
at Middle, Ga. 1960 ie
Johnny Brown, ClO se
Brown, Rt. 1, "Milicigevilie
Ph. GL. 24278.
Big Bone Guinea .450 Ib.
sow and 4 pigs, 6 wks. old,
for sale. W. P. Mize, Rt. 3,
Clarksville.
lips, e/o Westover Farm, Ken-| rv
6 dbl. reg. polled Hereford
bulls from 21 to 22 mos. of
age, well marked, from Soot
bloodlines and large for age.
eee for heavy service, Har-
A. Wasden M. D., Quit-
man.
Reg. SPC pigs, long meat
type of best bloodlines. Fine
for 4-H project. Now 8 weeks
old. See at my place or place
order early, George Fergu-
son, Rt. 1, Cave Spring.
Reg. Hereford hogs, best
-bloodlines, Reg. in buyers
name, well marked, thrifty,
8 weeks old Nov. 2nd, $22.50 |
ea. at farm and $27. 50 ship-
ped. Letters answered. Leon-
ard Fleming, Reed Creek Rd.,
Hartwell.
12 crossed Duroc and Lan-
drace pigs for sale at my place.
Be Balk Bt. 333 Box 110:
Savannah, Ph. EL. 5-2962.
2 Duroc gilts, 7 pigs, ea.
from good stock, gilts 250 lb.
ea., 15 mos. old, $130. James
A. Jackson, 2618 Baldin St.,
Columbus, Ph. FA 3-7583.
First class Berkshire boar,
11' mos. old, grandson of a
Certified meat sire, $65. W.
H. Hardman, Rt. 2, Commerce.
OIC breeding stock, good 3
mos. old gilt, med type, $25.,
also nice developed 8 wks.
old pigs, $20. ea. or cheaper
at farm. Will treat, Reg. buy- |.
ers name and crated. Paul J.
Cain, Rt. 1, Commerce. ~
Purebred Duroc hogs, eith-
er sex, open gilts, $35.-$50.;
bred gilts, $75.-$100.; males,
$35-$50. also 1 good farm
mule, $85. Marvin Newsome,
Sandersville.
Horses, Mules & Ponies
Grey mare Shetland pony,
5 mos. old, $200.; Spot Shet-
land pony stud, 5 mos. old,.|
$125.; two yr. old Welsh
strawberry stud, $85.; mare
10-yr. old, 5 month bred to
40 in. Palomino
$200. L. C. Williams, Rt. 2,
Cochran c/o Red Dog Farm,
Ph. WE 4-2654.
mported| i
-| wheels
g oi
Michael von Mot
|e/o Dogwood-
| Thomson, Ph. 32'
lb., broke to rid
S125--a
Clyde Peeples, 2:
St.,. Winder, Ph,
Fine 4 yr. old iding
with 15 mo. old
horse and colt :
and can be h
ere rae
son, Old- Taohes
a Ph. MA
good ee, a
mares, bred, ch
fillies, geldings
broke to ride,
and four young
reasonable. ie
Ste
boro, Ph. BE 7- 7307.
old Tenn.
strawberry
| conformation
good with chi!
Woodson, 537 Heard
berton. Ph. 483. _
Two black mare mules;
1000 Ibs., gentle,
match, will run in |
with other stock, 151
two-horse wagon with
in good d.
all leather saddle, f
$10.; Shop set, inclu
vil, bellows, |
Mrs. J. W. Moultric,
Woodbury, Ph. 3711.
mos. old, $18.-$25
reg. in oe n
within 100 miles.
Zipperer, 1] :
(15 miles Southeast of
ton oe Hwy. 30).
broke. D.
Snapfinger Rd.
BU. 9-0283.
AT stud: =
Shetland | PBBA
Westwood Farm, -
Dunwoody, Rd., N
ta; Phe BL. 5-393
-
mailed to you.
NOTICE
At the 1955 session of the Chanel Assembly the witli
brands law was amended to provide for registration with the Com-
missioner of Agriculture your mark or brand of livestock,
If you desire to register your mark or brand, you may Ww
our Department for application, and all itegetraly rorot will
There is no cost for this registration except the oe
to the Ordinary of the County in which your cattle are locate
PHIL oer .
er
At Stud, reg. Tennessee
alking Horse, outstanding
-gonformation, Fee, private
mtract, Merry Boy Blood-
, Standing on farm in Cobb
ounty, RecN, eiebe "B;
ohnson Ferry Rd., Marietta,
427-6268.
2 good roping horses, spir-
red but gentle. For informa-
on, See Jerry Stewart, Rt.
, Cumming.
One morgan Reet stud
tolt, one Tenn.-Walker, geld-
o, 2 yrs. old. Sell or trade for
attle. Peter Hodkinson, Rt.
, Pea Ridge Rd., Cornelia,
h, 778-4678.
Small saddle mare, good
orker, raised 2 colts, for
oe or trade for plow mule
x cattle. Tearl Fincher, Rt.
, Bremen. -
; Prtrs large work horse,
Belding, 5 yrs. old, broke any-
where single, would be extra
good logging horse, for sale.
sreer McWilliams, Rt. 3, Li-
onia.
Mare mule, 7 years old, wt.
3100 lbs., looks good and works
good $150. Hugh C. Power,
Beg: Marietta.
a gentle riding horse
r children, black mane,
red to fine saddle horse to
- $200. Mrs. J. Ann
Vhitlock, Senoia. Ph, LY 9-
sheep and Goats
Nubian milk goats, one doe
md one buck Cannot ship.
iss Dorothy Mathis, Tiger.
Excellent breeding buck
goat, 6-1/2 mos. old, sired by
Star B Herlindo Del- Norte,
Aleta
v home. Cannot ship. Mrs.
Lee Kirkley, 3860 Cascade S.
., Atlanta.
Saanan and Toggenberg
gross, first kids 5 mos. old,
_ theavy milker; one young doe
me stock ready to breed,
oth from heavy milk lines,
$15. for both. R. M. Moore,
10 South Cobb Dr., Mariet-
a, Ph. HE. 5-0286.
Buck, reg. Fr. Alpine Star
Herlindo Del - Norte
125253. Born March 28 1957.
ornless, very gentle. Son of
ar Diablo Del-Norte
A109786 and Herlindo Del
orte 4 Star MARI1968 and
28AR2476, $200. See, very
arge, excellent herd sire.
ellie M. Mingledorff, Rt. 3,
ouglas.
LIVESTOCK
WANTED
Want buy some little pigs,
ony of Atlanta. M. F.
eterson, 3496 Wesley Chapel
d., Decatur, Ph. BU. 9-1859.
Want Nubian buck goat of
gow, one that can be han-
filed with rope if not milking
pill right. Will buy or trade
fn coming in with 2nd. calf
2 mos. Letters ans. L. E.
oe Rt. 1, Williamson, Ph.
Want Uubian buck goat of
ervice age. M. D. Beauchamp,
3; Conyers.
Want Welsh solid color
gen. 3-6 yrs. old. Trade
hetland Buckskin or buy
putright, or will sell Shet~
and. Guy McMillian, Dacula.
h. TH 44-39 (Lawrence-
ville).
SEED & PLANTS
FOR SALE
Imp. Mastodon strawberry
2 80c C., plus 35c post-
Bee; 500, $3.75 plus $1.00 post-
: so 8s 00 M. plus $1.50 post-
: oe Well rooted, large plants.
E, Johnson, Rt. 2, Craw- |
fordvi
nesday October 12, 1960
White > mullipives onion
sets, $2.00 gal. PP, Mrs. C. B.
Fields, 149 So. Butler St., Ca-
milla.
Shallot onions, $1.00 gal.
and 38c postage for ea. gal.
E. M. Bradley, Rt. 1, Grayson.
Davie Barley, treated, $1.60
bu; Cokers 47-27 wheat, Ist
yr., Purity, 99.63 pct; Germ.
91 pet. $3.00 bu., treated; 2nd
yr. Purity, 99. 40 pet; Germ.
94 pet., $2.50 bu. in 2 bu.
bags, All recleaned, treated,
bright and in good bags. Saebe
Carter, Winterville. Ph. LI 3-
9775 (Athens).
Ga. collard plants, packed
in damp moss, 50c C. Add
postage. H. F. Seay, Rt. 2, 3917
Panthersville Rd. Ellenwood.
About 250 stalks seed Su-
gar cane to be dug before cold
weather, five cents stalk. Roy
T. Greer, Hampton.
MARKET BULLETIN
800 Bobwhites and 150 chu-
kars, flight cond., ready for
release. Bargain price for
lot; .also breeder pens. Per-
mit No. 34. J. L. Taylor, Rt.
a Taylors Mill Rd, Ft. Val-
ey.
Extra large Northern Bob-
white breeder quail, 1960
hatch, improved 40 yrs. 1 to
3 ounces heavier than aver-
age. Weight cert., free color
photos of Champions and
prices on request; also will
pay $10.00 pr. for unrelated
Bobwhites larger than my
star breeders. Per. No. 68.
Wm. A. Thomas, Box K, 421
Mark Bldg. Atlanta 3. Ph. MU
Fine var. everbearing
strawberry plants, 90c -doz.,
$2.50 C. Add postage. Mary
Tumlin, Eastanollee.
Blakemore and_ Dorsetts
strawberry plants, ea. kind,
$1.25 C; 500, $5.00, $8.00 M.
No chks. Mrs. J. O. Waldrip,
Rt. 7, Gainesville.
Crimson clover, reseeding
variety, pure seed 99.71 pct.,
germ. 91 pct. no noxious weed,
25c per lb. (lots of 500 Ibs
or more considered for less).
Billy Bentley, Rt. 2, Thomas-
ton, Ph. MI 7-5121 (after five
PM).
KY 31 Fescue, 97.44 pure,
8600 Germ, 25c lb. Dixie re-
seeding crimson clover seed,
1960 crop, 99.73 pure seed 81.-
00 Germ. in 100 Ibs. bags,
_|25e lb. Jack Bentley, Thom-
aston.
Cokers Moregrain seed oats
Germ. 86 pct., good, heavy
bright, $1.00 bu. at barn. Rus-
sell Montgomery, Rt. 1, Rey-|,
nolds, Ph. Tilden 17-4226.
Pure Georgia adapted
Abruzzi Rye seed, purity 98.-
26 pct. Germ. 89.00 pct. Makes
good forage; an _ excellent
queer, W. L. Mims, Hephzi-
ah.
3,000 bu. Suregrain oats,
Germ. 95 pct., 2,000 bu. Ra-
dar oats, Germ. 94 pet., $1.20
bu. Picked up at farm in new
four bu. bags; also Gator rye,
Germ. 77 pct., $2.40 bu. and
Dixie Crimson Clover, Germ.
92 pct., 2lc lb, C. M. Pip-
pin, Jr., Rt. 2, Albany.
Red scallion onions and
buttons, ea. kind, $1.75 gal;
red and green strong Cow-
horn pepper, 8 pods, 25c;
Black Snake root, 60c for
large match box full. Add
postage. G. T. Brown, Rt. 1,
Ball Ground.
Any amount everbearing
strawberry plants, $1.00 C;
300, $2.50. Mrs. R. P. Ham-
mond, Rt. 1, Cedartown.
Imperial f ros t - proof
strawberry plants, $3.00 C.
with 30c minimum postage.
Strong plants, 2 yr. from Nur-
sery stock, damp cellophane
wrapped, Black raspberry
plants, $1.00 doz. and postage.
Mrs. Z. D. Dodd Rt. 1, Box
223, Alpharetta.
Klondike strawberry plants,
well es and damp pack-
ed, $1 Ci-$8.M. Add 25c-C
for postage. Min. shipment
200 plants. Mrs. Luther S.
Butler, 466 Page Ave., N. E.,
Atlanta 7. Ph. DR 3- 1846,
Collard plants, 50c C, at my
place after 5 PM. Won't ship.
H. C. Reid, 2303 So Pryor Rd.
Atlanta 15. Ph. PO 1-7626.
Tenn. Beauty and Klondike
strawberry plants, $1.50
postpaid in 1st and 2nd zone.
Mrs. A:-C.; Holland, Rt. 2,
Gainesville.
Seed cane, three cents stalk
at the patch. Booking orders
for Fall del. B. F. OBerry,
Rt. 1, (Millwood)
GAME, FOWL, etc,
Cale at ea.;
ft Sebrights,
ul
PAGE FIVE
12 fine stock, April 1960
R. I. Red hens, soon be lay-
ing, $20.00, or $1. 75 ea, same
hatch roosters, $1.50 ea. H. F.
Seay, Rt. 2, Panthersville Rd.
Ellenwood.
8 young bantam hens, good
layers and breeders, about 1
doz. nice bantam pullets al-
most ready to lay and young
roosters. R an g e chickens,
wheat fed 2 mos., cross of
sev. good breeds, 50c ea. C. G.
Rd Rt. 1, at Veal, Bow-
on.
2 purebred, heavy build,
long leg Dark Cornish March
1, 1960 hatch, $5.00 or $2.75
About 29 ye guineas,
Speckled kin very tam
lay in Spring. at my hom,
Write before coming afte
Mrs. Milford Hall, Rt. 3, Pin
Grove, Baxley.
23 guineas, $15 for lot T. 4,
coe Rt. 2, at Arcade, a
POULTRY
WANTED
CR LT A I NE,
Want 20 W. L. ready to lay
8-0866. ea. M. O. only. Miss Cora B.
SBeauHieS GULL GOL of Dio: eee Rt. 1, Box 35, Ty} pullets, vicinity of Atlanta,
lific breeders, strong and ee eB Peterson, .<3496 Wesley
healthy, hatched in early|,,19 Roundhead game hens,|Chapel Rd. Decatur. Ph. BU
1960. Per. No. 34. J. E. Akins, | 1999 hatch, 5 Claret hens,| 9 1959.
1531 Athens Ave., S. W. At-| 1959 hatch, $2.00 ea. 3 pr.
fantacto: - Silver Pheasants, and 1 pr.
, |Ringnecks, 1960 hatch, $5.00
Northern Bobwhite quail,| pr. W. L. Cannon, 120 W. 54th
$3.00 pr; day old, 30c ea.;
doves, white, $5.00 pr; Ring-
necks, $3.00 pr., chukar par-
tridges, $5.00 pr. Ship Exp.
Col. M. O. Per. No. 47 Miss
Eve Wallace, 716 Myrtle St.
N. E. Atlanta 8. Ph. TR 4-
5152:
Northern Bobwhite quail,
1960 hatch, 4 wks. old to full
grown, Permit No. 71. L. E.
Toole, Rt. 2, Cochran, Ph. WE
4-2853.
For sale (one week only),
10,000 Northern Bobwhite
quail, matured, 80c ea. FOB.
Per. No. 6. Chas. B. Howard,
P. O. Box 124, Barnesville.
Northern Bobwhite quail,
Per, No. 52, J. L. Tade, 1328
21st Columbus. Ph. FA 3-2422,
Rabbits, 6 - 8 wks. old. Sell
or trade for chickens. C. R.
Philpot, 2377 Summit Ave.,
rae Atlanta 18. Ph. SY 4-
N. Z. White or Calif. rab-
bits, mature does or bucks
$3.50 ea. proven breeders for
commercial or Show _ use,
$7.50. M. T. Weiner, 1168 Ar-
bor Vista Dr. N. E. Atlanta 6.
Ph. ME 6-5491.
7 White Zealand rabbits for
sale. W. O. Paris, 419 old
Dixie Hwy., Mountain View.
Ph. PO 1-6253. :
White King pigeons, $1.50
pr. 25 pr. or more, $1.00 pr.
Jack Crowder, c/o Melody
Farm, Rt. 3, Marietta.
POULTRY
FOR SALE
St., Savannah. Ph. AD 2-6771.
Brown Leghorn pullets, 8
wks. old, Austria White and
Buff Orpingtons, 3 mos. old,
also roosters, at my place, 3
FOR SALE
Nice dried fruit, free from
mi. No. Swainsboro, Mrs.| peeling and core, 50c lb. and
Henry Futrell, P. O. Box 83,| postage. Mrs. R. L. McClure,
Swainsboro. Rt. 5, Ellijay.
MILK PRICING
INDEX
The Georgia Milk Commission milk
pricing formula index released by the
Economists at the Georgia Experiment
Station October 1, 1960, is 26.9530,
which determines that the price of
milk to consumers, producers, and
wholesale prices for November and
December, 1960, remain the same as
September and October, 1960.
Araucanus Easter Egg chic-
kens, $8.00 pr.; Dark Cor-
nish bantams, Bulldog type,
$5.00 pr; Golden Sebright
bantams, $4.00 pr. Ship Exp.
Col. M. O. Mrs. Addie A. Ed-
wards, 716 Myrtle St. N. E.,
Atlanta 8. Ph. TR 4-5152.
Golden Sebright bantams,
$1.50 ea. Marvin -Newsome,
Sandersville. 6 mi. Ea, San-
dersville. Ph. 3856.
7 Brown and Red game
hens and rooster, $16; young
pullets and stags from Claret
hens and rooster, Reasonable
for lot. P. C. Powell, 1400
Northwest Dr. N. W. Atlan-
ta 18. Ph. SY 4-4772.
About 25 game stags, some
hens and pullets. At my home.
Write before coming. Fred
Ledford, Rt. 1, Talmo.
~ Pit games, Greys,
Clarets, Roundheads, some
Spangled Roundheads, Cuban
Blues, Red Shuffler cock, Red
Fox hens, $4.00 ea.; stags, $8
cocks, $12. 00 - $15
lot of this yrs young, $8
io Will ship.
Boroughs, Rt.
Richmond Hill.
i Ce hatched fancy lay-
ers, 3-1/2 mos. old pullets,
N. H. Reds, $1.75 ea; 7 N. H.
hens, $1.50 ea. Mrs. Geo. Nor-
mandy, Rt. 11, Ridgewood Rd.
N. W.Atlanta. Ph. CE 3-0048.
Bulldog bantams, 2. mos.
old, $5.00 doz; 1 pr. Golden
$1.00; 2 ee
et and rooster, $1.50;
Reds,
}, Box < 113,
Sere to
Samuel C.]|.
_ THE WORLD OF WOOD
AS
a oo one
Nil yy
i
nie
nae a i ee sa
teen |
/ i
_ E i i
7a E :
FORESTS ARE THE FUTURE FOR THE SOUTH, PROVID,
f NT JOBS, STEADY INCOMES, AND f A WIDE VARIETY OF Bi
4 VITAL W Woop PRODUCTS. FORESTS ARE FUN, TOO. MANY en
SOUTHERN | PULP AND PAPER COMPANIES yes MAKING IT EASY Sate
R_ YOU TO ENJOY THE FORESTS BY PROVIDING PARK AND
PICNIC AREAS ON THEIR TIMBERLANDS. f
_ PAGE SIX
100 lb. white feed sacks, no
holes nor letter, 25 ea., or
washed, 3 for $1. Add 25c post-
for ea. 6 mailed, Mrs.
E ee Box 42, Haral-
sar crop shade dried sage,
finely ground, pure, 30c ounce,
$4.80 lb., plus postage and
stamped envelope, No order
illed without postage. L.
ouglas Griffith, Rt. 1, Dallas.
Farm. bells eae If in-
terested, see. ; Cain, Rt.
a fetches.
Black and white scupper-
fv for sale at my farm.
arvey Greer, Rt. 3, Stone
ountain. Ph. HI 3- 5501.
MA
Shade dried sage, 30 at.
$1. gal; red scallion onion but-
tons, 75 C. Mrs, Leila Phil-
L.| lips, Rt. 1, Royston.
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
Want good hay in vicinity
of Atlanta. Contact. M.
Peterson, 3496 Wesley Chapel
Rd. Decatur. Ph. BU 9-1859,
Want 1 ton white seeded
sweet yellow Lupine. State
germ. and purity. W. H. Wil-
son, Rt. 1,Albany, Ph. HE 5-
Coastal and Fescue hay,| 4038
5 bale; Rye hay, 65c bale.
i m. L. Caton. c/o Julip
arm, Flint River Rd. Jones-
boro. Ph. Gr 8-9689.
2 tractor tires, 10-28, worn
ome but still good tread.
20. for both. Jack Dukes,
inston. Ph. WH 2-2725.
Nice, new sage, hand gath-
ered and dried in shade, 7
Tbs. $7.25 plus postage, or
$8.25 postpaid. Enclose
stamped envelope. Must sell
- to one hia bes Mrs. Alta
ood, Rt. 2, Martin.
Country hams from
dean type hogs, 10-60 Ibs. ea.,
1. Ib. Wm. E. Lanier, Rt. 2
Me 84, Metter, Ph. MU. 5-
~ Ground cobs and _ shucks,
priced reasonable. Forest M.
rnold, Rt. 3, Baxley, Ph.
035.
60 gal. Syrup kettle, $15. at
fis place. Minor Sapp, Rt. 2;
anassas.
Berea ene ean Src
Good quality Coastal and
common Bermuda hay for
ale. Walter Jackson Rt. 3;
ort Valley, c/o Luce Bros.
arm, P.O. Box 392, Fort
alley.
Coastal Bermuda hay, high-
. fertilized, baled with wire.
ill del. up to 200 miles in
10 ton lots. Call collect. J. L.
oe Rt. 3 Dublin, Ph. BR.
95 chicken feed sacks,
100 Ib. cap. nice smooth
loth, 25 ea. Will ship C.O.D.
Ou pay postage. Mrs. G. M.
Wagoner, Rt. 2, Blairsville.
Catnip, 30c bunch; pepper-
mint, 30c doz.: Queen of Mea-
low, 25c bunch; Ratsbane, 60c|M
arge match boxful. Add Dost-
e. Mrs. Freeman Long, Rt.
Ettijay.
Improved broad leaf sage
poets. 75c doz. cheaper in
rge amts; Peppermint
plants, 50c doz. Exchange for
white or colored feed sacks.
Myrtle Pace, Rt. 1, Temple.
New clean white chicken
feathers. No tail or wing
_ feathers, 4 Ibs. $1. Add 50c
postage for each 4 Ibs.
checks or stamps. Mrs. L. G.
eabolt, Rt. 1, Hartsfield.
10 Ib. cap. print flour sacks,
washed and pressed, 12,
rs. Ira Blankenship,
x 85, Wrightsville.
Nice, bright sundried ap-
ples, Linbertwig and Horse
apples mixed, 70c lb. and 17c
Ib. for postage. No less 4 ibs.
sold. No chks. nor Sunday
rade. Mrs. Lon Ashworth, RL
Dacula.
Jumbo Bushel gourds, 4-6
ft. around $25. ea; seed from
the big ones, 3 seed, $1.; Dish-
g and Dipper, 50c pkg. L.
E. Morgan, Rt. 4, Waycross.
50 nicely branches Pome-
ranate bushes, approx. 18
n. high, at my place. Can-
not ship. Write. Paul R.
Camp, 207 Gramling St.,
Marietta.
Combine
P.O.
run wheat and
Bu. for feed: wheat, $2.25
u ce $1. bu. No deliveries.
F. Dorsey, McDonough-
Fayetievite Rd. Lovejoy. _
Sundried 1960 crop apples,
65c Ib. also, Beeswax, 50c
Add postage. No chks. Mrs. J.
F. Parker, Rt. 4, Box 184,
Calhoun.
Yellow roo, fresh dug and
. washed, 85c for 4 Ib. lard box-
ful; old fashioned large
looming sunflower seed, 30c
cupful; Queen of the Mead-
ow, 3 bunches 60c; fresh, red
hot pepper, 50c lb. Add post-| $3.
Box Mrs. Dewey Ellis, Rt. 5,
ox 58, Ellijay.
No.
$1.| PP.
Want second hand _ small
hand power honey extractor.
M. F. Pirkle, 1582 Olympian
Circle, S. W. Atlanta 10.
Want clean, dry hot pepper
for sausage purposes. State
kind and price. Mrs. Joe
Baker, Rt. 1, Norman Park.
Want 10 tons of hay, suit-
able for cattle feeding, del
my place, Will pick up with-
in 50 miles. E. F. Wilkins, Rt.
4, Marietta.
Want 1 peck of Castor bean
seed. Advise price and when
can be delivered. C. E. New-
ton, Jr., 1268 Twin Pines Dr.,
Macon.
HANDICRAFTS
FOR SALE
Soft washable genuine
lambskin baby moccasins;
hand laced and emb. pink,
blue and white, $1.25 pair
PP. Mrs. Edgar Watkins, 3
houn.
Nice plain aprons, 50c ea.;
nice 2 yr. size dresses or
skirt and blouse, size, waith
20 in., dresses, $2., skirt and
blouse, $2.50; crocheted ray-
on booties with ribbon and
lace trim, in white pink, blue,
yellow, or green, 1.25. Add
postage: Miss Eula Cox, Rt.
, Cave Spring.
6 new heavy dbl. bed size
quilts, machine made from
wool and prints, $5. ea. and
50c postage; one twin bed
size, $4. $36. for lot. Send
Rt. 1, Pitts.
Crocheted doilies 16 in. dia.
Poinsettia design, $2. ea. PP.
and insured; doilies for end
tables snow flake design, $1.
Cas OPPs Miser de ola. Garrett,
Rt. 1, Box 108, Warm Springs.
5 quilt tops; Mozelles
Tacs Chinese Coin, Boys
Nonsense, Broken Sash,
Spirit of St. Ouse $2. 56
ea., handmade with new cloth.
30e postage. Miss Mozelle K.|
Clifton, Rt.
City.
One large quilt top, $2.50
Write before sending
money. Mrs. W. Blackwell,
2122 Brockett; Rd., Tucker,
Ph. HI. 3-9145.
4 vanity sets, 2 ruffled
dresser scarfs, Pineapple ruf-
fled chair back set, oval Pine-
apple doily, 15 x 25 in., 18 in.
doily, wheat and Grape de-
sign. Entire lot, $15. Mrs.
Sherman L. Adams, Rt. 4,
Gainesville.
Linen handkerchiefs, tatted
borders, $1.40: cotton, $1.25;
baby jackets, new style, made
of baby yarn, $1.25; bootees,
$1.25; handle holders, guest
towels, etc. PP in Ga., Mrs.
Georgia Taylor, c/o Newt
Spence, Rt. 5, Carrollton.
3 dbl. bed size quilt tops
made of new print scraps; 3
Bricks, made of wool and
flannel; 1 Lazy Gal, made
of new print, $2.50 ea. Mrs.
C. C. Davis, Rt. 1, Empire.
Bedspreads, dbl. bed_ size,
hand made of nice good ma-
2, Box 217, Twin
lb.| terial in different colors, $4.
ea. 60c postage; Quilts, dbl.
bed size, heavy cotton padded
new dark linings, Log Cabin
pattern, $7., 60c postage;
Quilt tops, $3. 00, 30c postage,
dbl. bed size, log cabin pat-
terns. Mrs. Roy T. Pruitt, Rt.
1, Buford.
Quilt tops, different designs,
ea. or two for $5. Add 30c
postage. Miss Mabel Parr, Rt.
1, Reynolds.
F.| Mrs. Byron Haynes,
. Mrs. J. J. Livingston, | G.
Hand crocheted Pineapple
and Cluster bedspread, extra
large size for dbl. bed, Cream
color cotton, $50. Mrs. .Carl
nate Star Route B, El-
jay.
Tea aprons, prints and solid,
50c ea., 3, $1.10, with s 3,
$1.25; large with bibs, 3, $1.-
50: long dresser scarfs emb.
and crocheted ends, 50c ea.;
Ladies bonnets, $1. ea., pot
holders, 2, 25c. Add postage.
RE,
Gainesville.
Large size pillow cases of
sheeting with crocheted
Dutch Girl and crocheted edg-
ing, $2.25 set or with crochet-
ed wild rose Medalion. $2.
set; new dbl. bed size quilts,
pieced by pattern, $7.50 ea.
No checks, stamps or C.O.D.
orders. Dura Bradley, Rt. 2,
Waco.
Bedspreads, $30. talbiechoeline
$17.50 and doilies, $1. ea.
crocheted, reasonable. Mrs.
Regina Misfeldt, 149 Carrutt
Dr., Marietta
Cotton-jersey pot holders,
weaved, col. asst., or plain, $1.
Add postage. C. Wholston
Rousey, Rt. 2, Comer.
Quilts, hand quilted, new
linings and tops, no dyed feed
bags used, dbl. bed size, $5.-
50 ea: large, med. small print
aprons, 3, all dif, with or
without bibs or pockets, $1.-
10. PP. Mrs. Hattie Hughes,
416 Hill St. Toccoa.
Woolen shoulder capes, cro-
cheted, $10. ea., for sale. Miss
Dallas Adams, 295 Hill St.,
Athens.
Hand made pillow | cases,
standard size, made of bleach-
ed sheeting designs, Water
Lily, Birds with Flowers, Mr.
and Mrs., His and Mers, $1.50
set, 4 sets, $5. Add postage.
Dresser scraf, large sizes, trim
i. lace, $1. Lucy Musson, 7
Steven St., Summerville.
Emb. pillowcases, good
sheeting, $2. pair; ladies
bonnets, $1. ea. print aprons
trimmed; $1. ea.; pot holders
quilted, 15e: ea.; oe 25c; Little
girls print dresses, 1-6 yrs.
$1.75 ea.; 3 pe. vanity set,
searf to match emb. and lace
trimmed. $3 Add postage. Mrs.
A. L. Hudgins, Rt. 1, Temple.
New cotton scrap quilt tops,
$3. plus postage. Mrs. H.
Westbrook, Rt. 2, Cumming,
a
Sev. standard size 3 pe.
vanity sets with matching
doily in all white or trimmed
in yellow, aqua or blue, $3.
set; one set, beige with
matching doily and 16 x 36
dresser scarf, $6. for 5 pieces.
All del. Mrs. Ida S, Walker,
232 Maple St.; Carrollton.
9 pce. white crocheted chair
and sofa sets, $4.50; 3 pe.
white vanity sets, $2. ecru,
1.50; one average size white
popcorn stitch bed spread,
$45.; center pe. colored an d
white, $1.50-$2.50; pillows
$2. Add postage. Mary Tum-
lin Rt. 1, Eastanollee.
Hand emb. pillow cases
made of good white material,
good size hems, $1.50 set. Add
postage; no stamps or checks.
ae Rundles, Rt. 7, Gaines-
ville
White feocinicd bootees
trimmed in pink, blue, yellow
and green, 75c pair; also bibs
to match both, $1.00; white
cotton Hdks. crocheted edge,
50c ea.; white crocheted lace
for pillowcases, $1.00 pair.
Mrs. H. H. Robinson, Rt. 1,
Monroe.
Print aprons with bibs, 80c,
without bibs, 70c, stove pads,
2, 35c; bordered pillow cases
of pillow case material, $1.00,
35c pair. PP. -Mrs. Ela
Moore, Cataula.
New handmade quilt tops
full dbl. bed size made of good
prints and solid colors, Ja-
panese Puzzle, Sweet Gum
Leaf, Wagon Wheel and other
patterns that dont know t he
name, $3.00 ea. and add post-
age. Mrs. Alma Pharr, Rt. 1,
Canton.
3 new applique quilt tops,
dbl. size on white with dif.
colors print and solids, 1 ea.
Dutch Doll, Fan, Cinderella
Girl, green with white, has
on shoes and emb. hands, $6
ea. Mrs. Troy Staten, Box 3.
Chatsworth, Dalton.
4 full size bed quilts, newly |
quilted, $5.00 ea.; = pieced tops, | : Size quilt
dyed lining. 1 crib size for Seg 30 ge
baby bed, $2.50. Located near W. E. Swann.
ee Wilkeys ae: are re Fie Branch.
140. Mrs. C. C. Blackwell,
4, Box 176, Alpharetta. bo ee ee ae for sale,
ea. other tops, ee
Hand tufted Peafowl de-
sign, full dbl. bed size bed-
spread in all colors, fadeless
thread on goad grade seamless
sheeting, $6.00 and 30c post-
age. Mrs. Edgar Adcock, Rt.
2, Adairsville.
4 Humpty Dumpty pajama
bags, 2 with arms, legs an d
jackets of red checkered ging-
ham, 1 print, 1 striped, emb.
head and face on white, back
zipper closings, $1.50 ea. plus
10c postage. Now ready for
mailing. Mrs. W. J. Suggs, Rt.
1, Chickamauga.
Afghan, hand made, full
bed size, Granny Pattern
squares, $50.00. Mrs. Anne
Rogers, Rt. 2, Buford. A
New hand made dbl. bed
size quilts, good cotton solid
and print material, cotton
padding, Dbl. Wedding
Ring, Basket design with
applique handles, Fancy Flo-
wer, $12 ea; Windmill and
Monkey Wrench design $8
ea; others, $6. Add postage. |.
Mrs. Dewey Ellis, Rt. 5, Box
58, Ellijay.
Pillowcases, .emb. crocheted
edge, $1.00 set out of sheeting;
broadcloth, $1.25 set; dish
towels, 7, $1.00; emb. white or
pastel aprons, print or solid,
3, $1.00; small, medium, 75c.}
Add 35c postage. Nell Bennett,
Rt. 1, Box 21, Oakwood.
Pillowcases, emb. on blea-
ched muslin, size 40 x 36,
$1.75 set; quilt tops for dbl.
bed, $2. 25; loom woven p o t
holders, 10c: ea, 3, 25e. Add
postage, Vella Rice, Biss;
Cumming.
FALL FARM LAND
EDITION OCTOBER 19
The annual fall FARM LAND edition of the Mar
ket Bulletin will be published Wednesday, October
The deadline for all notices arriving in the Bulletin.
office Is Oct. 3. Notices received later than Oct.
(regardless of reason involved) will NOT be published.
less in lots of 6 tops.
age. Miss Addie ~
Rt. 1, Gainesville.
, Novelty pot holders, 25
$1.00; aprons,
A a $1. 25; towels,
35c ea. 3, Pave diaper
35c ea. 3, $1.00; baby b
ea. 5, $1.00. Add postage.
Freeman Long, Rt
October 21 - Friday -
soy Polled Shorthorn
orm =
Breeders show and 5
Camilla, Mitchell Co.
oo 8:30 A. M. Sale
A. M. 50 rugged,
aged bulls; 80 femal
some in Show c
in pasture flesh, . .
istered cattle, including
calves at foot. . . For
ther information a
loguc, _
Hancock, Secy., 4525,
Rd, Rt. 4, Stone Mo
ing age . stallions. .
st kinds of childrens
Only Farms and Farm Land = Sein ee te
Rent, Wanted to Buy or Exchange, for or Wanting
Rent - are ELIGIBLE for publication. Notices n
not exceed 70 words, including name, address :
phone number when desired. Notices will be
down or returned to writer if submitted oth
ONE notice ONLY to an individual or
in case of separately owned tracts.
Notices in the interest of Real Estate firms, sine
brokers, banks, dealers, etc., or for city and big town
lots, individual houses, apartments or rooms, stores,
filling stations, summer or winter resorts, and
LIKE nature will NOT be published.
Notices of out-of-state property or for non-
residents of Georgia will NOT be allowed, except w
a Georgia taxpayer owns the Georgia land and is eee
essarily out of the state ... in such cases, an @
planation for the out-of-state address should accompany
the notice and will be published with the notice.
After "going to press it is ABSOLUTELY IM-
POSSIBLE to alter notices or to stop publication of |
the original copy. All duplicate notices will be dis-
carded
Notices should be carefully written (typed or |
printed preferred) and signed in the PERSONAL
HANDWRITING of the party responsible for the
tice ... then addressed to Elizabeth Hynds, Editor
Notices, Market Bulletin, Agricultural Bldg., 19 Hun
St. S. W., Atlanta 3, Ga. cone
The Bulletin {s not and will not be RESPONSI-
BLE for typographical or Printers errors, or for
rors (of any kind) made by the pelts in v
original notices. E. H.
dects In Stored Peanuts
(Continued From Page 1) over the present situation. In line with
The peanuts apparently become this thinking the committee makes the
d after digging, through the use of following suggestions:
combines, sacks, trailers and 1. Avoid damage to the pods
~All = these eiotots are iivalved (a) Correctly adjust combines (ad-
= : ditional research is needed in
Ree wecctive apparent to | this area).
committee that e saepeely a (b) Run combines at correct speed
problem. The elimination of cracked s0 as not to overload the ma-
and loose shelled kernels undoubt- chine.
Git ee Bic Gest anewer but this. (c) Combine when peanuts are
e difficult to achieve. ee en
There seems to be no doubt that the d) Use wiloadmg and har a
drowing and combining method of Se ce oe ee
vesting has contributed significantly ee et eee ne
ibis moblem, Walle ngone exvens the | (g) Reduce pints of handing to
yas : minimum.
eee a epee . Prevent Insect Infestations Prior to
esting method. ee bi :
While the committee feels, as stated = oo ee
ve, that there is no one answer to the (b) er bags or clean and
roblem, progress in: (1) Avoiding pod fumigate old bags
am nage, (2) Preventing infestations in ;
(c) Cl ds trucks, trail-
prior to storage, and (3) Improving : he dee bine
age facilities and practices, certainly (d) Clean and spray temporary
result in a significant improvement areas before use.
CASE FOUND
ALABAMA RECENTLY
Discovery recently of screwworms at The Sebring sterile fly production and
reneva, Alabama, close to the Florida distribution facilities were closed in No-
border, has resulted in stepped-up live- | vember last year and placed on a stand-
ock inspections in Florida, and inten- by basis after less than 18 months of op-
ve measures by state and Federal au- eration in a successful southeastern eradi-
ies in Alabama to prevent the pos- cation program.
y of infestations spreading. Since then, program activities have
Samples taken from a small wound concentrated on livestock inspections to
- on one animal in a 35-head shipment of . forestall the possibility of imported
cattle from Athens, Texas, to Geneva screwworms getting a foothold again.
re confirmed here Tuesday at the iden- According to Dr. Campbell, it is not
n center of the State-Federal anticipated the recent discovery of screw-
crewworm Eradication Program. worms in Alabama will necessitate re-
iis is the first positive case of screw- opening the Sebring sterile fly plant, as
rms in this area in more than a year. precautions being taken at Geneva in-
arly discovery after arrival of the in- dicate the situation there will be contain-
d animal from Texas emphasizes the en.
nportance of continuing in the South- However, Georgia, Florida, and Ala-
, careful inspections of all livestock bama farmers should be on the lookout
imported from any state where screw- continuously for possible screwworm in-
worms continue to-exist. festation.
NOTICE
_ FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED
ae : The State Department of Public Welfare has announced
the need for foster parents for children who need temporary
_ care away from their own homes during periods of emergency.
These children are not for adoption by the boarding
parents. TEMPORARY homes only are needed until the child-
ren can return to their own parents or relatives.
They range in age from infancy to teens. Homes are
needed, especially for older children and for family groups
and children with certain physical disabilities.
Board, medical care, clothing and other necessary items
of care are provided at established rates.
Families who want to share their homes and give these
children an opportunity for family living are requested to
get in touch with their local county aepaciments of public
elfare for further details.
Tobacco Diseases Are
Discussed In Meefings
A series of eight meetings are being
held in the tobacco growing areas to ac-
quaint producers with disease problems.
John B. Preston, Extension agrono-
mist, pointed out that all growers, county
agents seed and fertilizer dealers, custom
operators and tobacco warehousemen
and others interested in the tobacco in-
dustry are being invited to the meetings
on growing healthy tobacco plants. _
Research workers of the College of
Agriculture, the State Department of
Agriculture, the Georgia Farm Bureau
Federation and the Extension Service
will cooperate in the meetings.
Receiving special attention, Mr. Pres-
ton said, will be black shank. Although
there are only 220 known infestations
among 28,000 growers, the disease could
cost Georgia growers from $4,000,000 to
$5,000,000 annually if allowed to spread,
he continued.
Recommendations for controlling
black shank will be given by Dr. Luther
L. Farrar, head of the Extension path-
ology department, and Dr. John Owen,
chairman of the Universitys plant path=
ology division. Assistance provided by
the State Department of Agriculture will
be described by Frank Stancil, and the
Farm Bureaus part in the program will
be presented by President John Duncan.
Preston will give growers tips on pro-
ducing healthy tobacco plants and J. D.
Miles, agronomist of the Coastal Plain |
Experiment Station, will give recom-
mended varieties, fertilizers and cultures
practices for 1961.
Research results with MH-30, a to-
bacco sucker control chemical, will be
described by Dr. J. B. Harris, plant phy-
siologist at the Coastal Plain Station.
The first meeting was held October
11 in Eastman; the second was held Octo-
ber 12 in Moultrie. The other six meetings _
will be held as follows: October 14 in
the REA Building in Camilla; October
17 in the National Guard Armory in Val-
dosta; October 18 at South Georgia Col-
lege, Douglas; October 19 in the Court-
house in Waycross; October 20 in the
Grammar School Auditorium at Glenn-
ville, and October 21 at Georgia Southern
College, Statesboro.
African Fever Tick
Discovered In Florida
Africa east coast fever tick has been
1! discovered in Florida in a 200-acre com-
pound of Africa, U.S.A. at Boca Raton.
The Sebring identification center said
the discovery of the African ticks poses:
new problems in tick eradication because
of the ability of the African species to
survive on the ground for somewhat
more than a year. It is a two host crea-
ture and can be carried by the second
host animal after it has grown on the
first.
This tick is known to be a potential
i carrier of a livestock disease similar to
Texas cattle fever.
The compound is located in the south-
east corner of Palm Beach county which
at present is under a county-wide Federal
fever tick quarantine,
z.
PAGE EIGHT
a
MARKET BULLETIN
aaknaieiads laine basta can asian eee eee wien,
JOIN YOUR
LOCAL
Wednesday, October 12, 1
rARM
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