Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 1963 February 13

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Georgia

arke

Phil Campbell,

Farmers

Bulletin |

Commissioner



sUME 48



armers Should Join
ommodify Organizations

_ By PHILCAMPBELL
: Commissioner of Agriculture

There is strength in numbers. There
(ORE strength in ORGANIZED num-

See



aver since this nation began to evolve
a2 an underpopulated land with a
qarily agrarian economy into a popul-
industrial power, the people have
the challenge of loss of individual
er and status by merging into -om-



. interest organizations.

in the early years of our country,
1omic organizations were not neces-
. Because we were few in number,
individual was important and pow-
. There was more land to till than
e were farmers to work; there were
e sick to tend than there were doc-
to help them; there were more houses
e built than carpenters to build them.
ty person had a ready market for his
ices and products.

These early settlers did their jobs
. They provided a foundation that led
he highest standard of living ever
eved by a nation. But with our suc-
2s came new problems. Problems that
2 best met by organized common in-
st groups.

ndustrial workers were the first to
gnize the necessity of an economic
nization and to use it effectively
ugh labor unions. Today there is a
r union in existance for every type
ork short of management itself,





sut_ management has not remained
{there is an organization for every
icular management group in the
ed States. In addition, there are As-
ited Industry organizations for each
: and a National Industrial Council.
e are also manufacturers organiza-
5, as well as chambers of commerce
ae state and national levels.

he professions have organized into
ps such as the American Medical As-
ition and the American Bar Associa-
For each of these labor, manage-
t and professional organizations there
ountless branch or local groups.

lthough the first agrarian societies

RGANIZATIONS

ATLANTA, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1963



1800s, it has not been until recent years
that the farmer has been inclined to, or
found it necessary to use his organization
for other than social or exchange-of-ideas
purposes,

_ The farmer by nature has always been
more individualistic than other segments
of the economy. However, today the

-farmer is beset by many problems that
-can best be met through organized effort.





Cooking Queen Contest

The Georgia Poultry Federation is look-
ing for Georgia's Cooking Queen. The
annual Cook-N-Test is open to Georgia
Homemakers 18 years of age or older.
Eighty-seven prizes are offered, ranging
from a fiming-clock to the grand prize of
a food freezer and a range. Get an entry

_ blank and information from your Home
Demonstration Agent or the Home Service
Department of the Georgia Power Com-
pany. Jot down your favorite recipe for
a poultry dish and egg dessert and you
are on your way. Enter now. March Ist
is the closing date.









i ribulcural
CALENDAR

Feb, 15, 16 Thirteenth Annual Conven-
tion, Georgia Livestock Associa-
tion, Scott Hotel, Thomasville.

Feb. 18, 19 Eighteenth Annual Meeting
of the Georgia Crop Improve-
ment Association and the Sixth
Annual Meeting of Foundation

Seeds, Inc., Athens.

Feb. 19 Cotton Short Course, ABAC,
Tifton.



Feb. 26, 27, 28 Fifty-Sixth Annual

: Convention, Southeastern Pecan
Growers Ass'n., Hotel Buena Vis-
ta, Biloxi, Mississippi.

Mar. 6 Gain Test Bull Sale, Coastal
Plain Experiment Station, Tifton.



Mar. 8 Shorthorn Breeders Ass'n. Annual
Meeting and Sale, Social Circle.



Mar, 11, 12 Fourteenth Annual Georgia
State Spring Barrow Show and
Sale, Americus.









NUMBER 24

ENEFIT YOU

As a result, Georgia farmers have become
highly organized.

Farmers representing every com-
modity produced in Georgia belong to
the Farm Bureau. However, most farm-
ers have realized that this one organiza-
tion cannot meet the many different and
highly specialized problems that relate to
each specific commodity,

Therefore, in addition to the Farm
Bureau, these farmers have joined several
commodity organizations, such as the
Georgia Livestock Association, the Ap-
ple Growers Association, the Georgia
Egg Association, the Georgia Poultry Im-
provement Association, and the Peach
Council, to name only a few.

But even these organizations could not
always meet each specific problem of the
members. Therefore, groups such as the
Cattlemens Association and the Georgia
Milk Producers grew out of organizations
such as the Georgia Livestock Associa-
tion. In addition, most every particular

breed of cattle also has its own associa-
tion,

This points up the fact that it is usu-
ally necessary for a farmer to belong to
several organizations in order to meet all
of the specific problems relating to the
commodity or commodities produced on
his farm.

Georgia farmers should make every
effort to join the organizations that are

beneficial to the items produced on their _

farms.

There is strength in numbers. There
is MORE strength in ORGANIZED num-
bers.

ASC Sets Loan Rate
On Flue Cured Tobacco

Price support on the 1963 crop of flue-
cured tobacco has been set at a national
average of 56.6 cents per pound, William
L. Lanier, State Executive Director, Geor-
gia Agricultural Stabilization and Con-
servation Service State Office, has an-
nounced. This compares with a national
average rate of 56.1 cents per pound
which was available for the 1962 crop.

Under law, price support is mandatory
on all kinds of tabacco for which market-

(Continued On Page 8)





nto appear in America in the early



Georgia



TATE OF THE SOUTH

STATE EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI



Georgia First

@ BROILERS
@ PEANUTS

@ PROTECTED FOREST LANDS
@ IMPROVED PECANS

@ PIMENTO PEPPER
@ NAVAL STORES























PAGE TWO |









PHIL CAMPBELL

GEORGIA MARKET BULLETIN
Georgia Department of Agricuiliure
Agriculiure Building
Capitol Square

Atlanta 3, Georgia
Phone JAckson 4-3292

|serted one time on each re-



Notices of farm produce
and appurtenances admissible
under postage regulations in-

quest.

No notice or advertisement
will be accepted from any
commercial business, any
commercial businessman, any
company or organization i-
censed as a commercial busi-
ness or doing business under
a trade mame 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.



1917.

Address
mailing list,

D. A. Pullin, Editor
Helen Spicer, Editor of Notices

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, Ga.
under Act of June 6, 1900. Accepted for mailing at special
rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Act of Oct. 8,

requests to be added to or removed from
changes of address,
MANAGER, Market Bulletin, Atlanta.
change of address must include OLD and NEW addresses.

to CIRCULATION

etc.,
All requests for



Address all complaints to



Address all notices and advertisements to EDITOR OF
NOTICES, Market Bulletin, Atlanta. 3

EDITOR, Market Bulletin,

| near









. Farm Work

WANTED

Good, white man and wife
need job on farm doing any
light farm work. Need house,
furniture and transportation.
Roland and Gladys Rhodes,
633, N. 19th St., Griffin.

Man and woman wants
place close to Atlanta doing
~jight farm work. Are honest
and willing people. Want 4 or
5 room house and some wages.
Ray Smith, 978 Seller Ave.,
Atlanta. ;

Man wants to caretake and
farm, any amount, near At-
Janta or in Fulton, Cobb, or
Clayton Co. Need 5 or 6 room
house. Roy C. Smith, 978
Sells Ave., S.W., Apt. 165, At-
lanta 10.

Single man, 63 yrs. old.
wants job doing light farm
work, Exp. in all types work.
Want reasonable salary, room
and board with honest people.
Can furnish references. James
M. Ferguson, 1080 Hill St.,
S.E., Atlanta 15, c/o Mrs. H.
W. Davis.

Man and wife, middleage,
white, need job at once as
caretaker or light farm work
of any kind. Can do both.
Raised on No. Ga. farm. Can
drive tractor but no car. Want

house, furnished. Will
have to come after. (Can get
directions from Pete Kemps
Store in Murrayville) D. L.











Grindle, Rt. 1, Murrayville,
e/o John L. Chambers. Ph.
LE. 4-3863.



White man, with wife and
5 small children, wants job
in dairy or chicken house.
Prefer laying hens, have sev.
yrs. exp. in dairy. Can drive
tractor or truck, do not drink.
Need job at once. Need 3 or
4 room house. John W. Sims,
RFD 1, Buckhead, Ga.

Exp. dairyman wants job
at once, have 17 yrs. exp., 34
yrs. old, have wife and 5
children. Need work now.
Willing worker, would need
house, with lights and water
and wkly. salary of $40. or
$45. Not much exp. with cows.
Located at Charlie Ledfords
place, about 7 miles from
Summerville. Eddie Lee Tapp,
Rt. 3. Summerville. .



Refined white practical
nurse wants job on farm do-
ing light farm work for room,
board and reasonable salary.
Mrs. Ethel Jefferies, 303
Se Ave., Chickamauga, Ph.

Two men, 42 and 50 yrs.
old wants job on cattle or
chicken farm, 3 boys, one girl,
7 in family. Will have to be
moved. E. W. Carroll, Rt. 2,
Ball Ground.

Exp. dairyman married, no
children, wants job taking
care of dairy cows and milk-
ing. Will go anywhere. Need
2 or 3 room house or trailer.
Do not drink, honest and re-
liable. Need transportation.
Kenneth Snedegar, Rt. 2, Box
196, Blairsville.

Want job as caretaker for
cattle ranch or laying pro-
ject. Ira L. Garner, Rt. 3, Box
401, College Park.

Single man wants job on
poultry farm, with broilers
or layers and will care for
semi-invalid man. Exp. Write
and state salary. Bill Stevens,
Rt. 1, Dahlonega.

Exp. dairyman and farmer
wants job in milking parlor.
Have wife and 4 small chil-
dren. Need 5 or 6 room house
with water and bath. Ray-
mond Hunt, Rt. 1, Box 231,
Guyton.

Man 65 yrs. old wants job
looking after hogs and cat-
tle. Have lots of exp. Prefer
living in Fulton Co. Have
some income. Have wife 30
yrs. old and 2 boys, age 8
and 10; 2 small girls, age 3
and 6. Also have horse exp.
Am originally from _ Blue
Ridge. Jessie L. Ellis, Rt. 2,
Box 19 A, Hahira.















Man 38 yrs. old with son
16 yrs. old, wants job at
dairy. Have 15 yrs. exp. with
all types dairy equip. Have
wife and 6 children. Want
good house with running wa-
ter and bath on school bus
route. O. B. Stephens, Rt. 1,
Milner.



Married man _ with wife,
mother, brothers 18 and 16
yrs. old and sister 14 yrs. old.
Would like share crop or day
work for wages. Will have to
be moved, would like good
home with elec. and water.
All letters ans. Charles Stin-



ton, 216 Poplar St., Tifton.

|cumbered white

Refined settled Christian
woman wants job doing light
farm work in good simple re-
spectable home. Have no bad
habits, am good cook and
housekeeper and practical;
nurse. Wi go anywhere.!
Mrs, Adelia Johnson, Appleton
Ave., 1264, Macon.

24 yr. old man | L
mother wants job with nice

ing with farm work.

have to be moved. Mrs. Ruth
C. Moses, Rt. 3, Lithonia.

Farm Help

WANTED



Want unencumbered white
woman to assist with light
farm work and housework
and to help with invalid cou-
ple, have other help. Modern
conveniences, $10. wk. salary
and board. F. L. Moore, Rt.
2, Ashburn.

Want white man to work
on dairy farm who can op-
erate milking machines, drive
truck and tractor. Able bodied
do not drink. We operate
milking parlor, surge machines
and pipe line. House furnish-
ed. Farm located 3/4 miles
from town on paved road
and school route. Give all
facts and references in first
letter. G. L. Rodgers, Dearing.

Want man capable of re-
pairing, exp. in carpenter,
plumbing and elec. work, to
farm about 10 to 15 acres
bottom land of 175 acre moun-
tain farm in Ga. on
shares. Will furnish 6 room
house, Farmall Cub . tractor
with hydraulic lift and all at-
tachments. Farm income may
be supplemented thru work at
yy summer resorts. P. A.
Clark, 78 Baker St., N.W., At-
Janta 8.

Want farm hand not over
37 yrs old with some knowl-
edge of general farming,
mainly working in apple or-
chard. Have 3 R. furnished
house with elec. but not wired
for stove. Located on Hurt
Rd. in Cobb County. Ref. re-
quired. J. Earl Anderson, Rt.
1, Austell, Ph. HE. 6-1080
(not collect, Smyrna).

Widow woman wants Christ-
ian lady above 62 yrs. old,
who has income, to share
home and do light farm work.
Good home for right party.
Mrs. B. B. Kennington, Rt. 2,
Gordon.

Want man to tend 7200 lay-
ing bird operation. House with
water, $50. per wk. salary.
Confining work. Must have
good references. Apply only
in letter. Don Booth, 240
Woodlawn Dr., Athens.

Want an elderly couple
with own income to live in 3
room modern home near town
and market and care for or-
chard and yards and take
care of small irrigated crop
of vegetable on halves. Lady
to help in the house and do
farm chores, light. Small sal-
ary, good opportunity for
right people. References ex-
changed. All letters answered.
Mrs. R. L. McGahee, Rt. 1,
Cordele.

Need good white woman to
do light farm chores and
housework. Will furnish room
and board plus salary. C. L.
Youngblood, Rt. 1, Sylvester,
Ph. 776-4292.

Want strong healthy unen-
i woman to
live in and do garden work
and housework with two el-
derly ladies. Good room and
some salary. Need by the first
of March. Permanent to right
person. Mrs. H. V. Redfearn,
Box 22, Pavo.

Want, good row crop and
tractor man for this year.
Must know how to farm and
not over 45 yrs. old. For
wages. or 50-50 basis of the
cotton crop, 15 acres and
board and laundry. Mrs. E.
M. Battle, Rt. 1, Calhoun, Ph.
MA. 9-6222.







and his |.

decent middleaged lady hel and distributors:

. Want colored girl
up garden and do ho V
Paul Coody Rt. 1, Flovilla.

Equipment

FOR SALE

John Deere tractor, planters
harrow.
plow for tractor; 1 horse wag-
on; buggy with top; black-
smith tools; anvil; several
plow stocks; fodder plows
and scrapes; grinding rock
(about 100 lb.); also, some
oats, bailed without rain, for
sale. Mrs. John E. Renfroe, Rt.
2, Fayetteville, Ph. HO. 1-
4022.

Trailer type, heavy duty
stalk cutter in excel. cond.,
$65. C. C. Giles Sr., Rt. 1,
Butler, Ph. 2-4013.

H. John Deere tractor, 1948
model, with 2 row cultivators.
planters and distributors, hy-
draulic lift, power take-off on
belt pulley, $300. D. S. Hay-
more, Rutledge, Ph. 484-7268.

1958 John Deere tractor
430, 3 disc John Deere pick-
up plows, set of front moun-
ted planters and cultivators,
in good cond., $1650. Fred
Williams, Rt. 4, Commerce.

Allis Chalmers TD 6, good
shape, 2 yrs. old, used only
part time, see it work, $8500.
H. W. Vaughn, 290 Milledge
Hegts., Athens, Ph. LI. 3-5815.

1960 Powell 2 row auto-
matic transplanter, complete,
excel. cond., 3 point hitca
with brackets to fit Ford tr-
actor, used 2 seasons, $350.
Hoyt P. Cown, Rt. 2, Logan-
ville, Ph. 826-4389 (no col-
lect calls).

Allis Chalmers 60 com-
bine, power unit included,
$500.; New Idea fertilizer sp-
reader, 8 ft. width, practically
new, $160.; grain drill, $60.;
David Bradley, hay rake, $60.
All in good cond. Miss Pearl







Wright, Bells Ferry Rd.,
Rome, Ph. 234-4322. :
D8800 Cat. power unit,

(for irrigation system, or any
heavy duty farm work),
$1800.; also, 1953 Ford V8
panel truck, $150. C. L. Kick-
Dehiet, Glennville, Ph. 654-

John Deere Model A. tr-
actor, starter and lights,
power takeoff and power-tr-
owl planters and cultivators,
dbl. section harrow and 5-
dise tiller, all in good cond.,
$895> WS: Young, Rt 2,
Gordon (Milledgeville Rd.).

2 F600 Ford, 2 ton, trucks:
1957 model, 174 in whl. base,
2 speed axle and 1960 model,
both in. 2.010 0d) <s hia pie
also, Major Deisel Ford tract-
or with Wagnor front-end
loader. All priced to sell. Mrs.
Ruth Yancey, Talbotton, Ph.
665-3359.

2 wheel tractor trailer with
good body, good cond., $50.
saree Hughes, Rt. 4, Dawson-
ville.

1956 I. H. pick-up truck,
new engine, new brakes, new
drums, extra good 6 ply mud
grip tires and brakes. All steel
welded cattle body optional.
Eliza Hayes, c/o Model Farm
Rt. 1, Sharpsburg.

1953 Dodge 1-% ton truck,
stake body and long wheel









base, excel. cond. Mrs. O. A.
Walls, Turin. (Hwy. 16).
2 Firestone heavy duty

truck tires, 750-20 good tread,
$20. ea.; one tractor tire, good
tread, 10 X 28, $15.; heavy
duty land roller with 3-point
hook-up for tractor, $85.; 4
heavy duty iron wheels, steel
axles with adjustable steel
turning tongue, $35. E. B.
Tepe Riverdale, Ph. 478-

1952 C. A. model Allis
Chalmers tractor, good tires,
will run, $300. Troy Edwards,
Rt. 1, Eatonton.





Want middleage white lady
to do light farm work an
help with laying hens. All
letters ans. I am an elderly
widow alone, live in 5 room
house, 5 miles from Waycross
on Hwy. 84. A. J .Lockliear,
Rt. 3, Box 361, Waycross.

_ Want white woman to do
light farm work and _ keep
house. State facts in first let-
ter. L. F. Powell, Rt. 1, Box





211,. Valdosta,



1946 Chev. pick-up truck

d|in good cond., good tires with

cattle bodies and new floor,
$175. Ralph Anthony, Rt. 1,
Nicholson.



Equipment for John Deere
A tractor: 2-row cultivators
and planters completely ready
to go, and six-row cotton
sprayer: mount for A John
Deere, and botany hoe (pull



t
151, :

Colbert



.|ter, for sa
(Dobbins)
| ginbotham, Rt.





le, A
fits any tra
letters answered. L.
2, Elbe
Ph. 283-5890. |

1953 Allis Chalmers 2
tractor, cultivators, disc
row, planters and pts., fue
gas burner, $550.; also,
versal milking machi};
strainer, 2 pails, $30. F
Anderson, Rt. 3, Ellijay.

John Deere mule 4d
stalk cutter, 1 row typ
running shape. $10. he
farm; 2 Cole cotton and
planters, 40 and 41,

guano hopper, plates to_

anything, both good shap
W. Thurmond, Farmington

18 A. G. Wood gas bi
ers, automatic waterers,
chick feeders, etc.; 2
tired tractor wagons; 1200
eap. Butler feed _ bins
John Deere Model 12
bine, power take-off,
cond. Mrs. J. H. Park,

Ph. 3863 (Woodbury).

D2 Caterpillar dozer,
good, all new bearings,
kets and seals including s
ing clutch; also, new s
sproket rimes, rales
winch. Merle B. Berro
awassee, Ph. 896-2401. -

90, 5 ft., chicken fe
with reels, good shape, 7.
for lot. A. T. Russell, R
Chatsworth. Ee
_ John Deere mowing
ine, almost good as new,
powered, 6 ft. blade and
extra blade, (tongue cut
to use with tractor,
teed perfect shape.
Harris, Rt. 2, Screven,
mi. North).

Heavy duty 4 dise fil
with 3 point hitch, almost n
cond, $125.; Ford culti
with 7 feet, good cond., $1{
Fergerson bottom. plow
old style bottoms, $35.;
banks Morris deepwell
completely rebuilt, $3.

J. McMillan, Rt. 1,
(6% mi. NE from
Postroad, farm formerly
ed by James Connell).
ee Sparks

3 H.P. David Bradley
den tractor, harrow, ct
tors, planters, turn plow
adjustable stock, all
cond., $100. at my pla
N. Griffin, E. Morson,
son Park, Rt. 3, Waycross,
AT. 3-3995 (not collect).

90 breeding pens for
equipped for automatic
erers; 8 holding pens,
grown quail capacity, an
hanging brooders for o
pens; also, several P-16
ers and other equipmen:

W. Webb, 133 Anderson C
cle, Smyrna, Ph. HE. 5-

_3 in. Gorman Rupp i
tion pump with 4 in. s
and outlet. Flexible _

tre Pump
trailer and powered by t
power takeoff, $325.; also.
Bailey electric chick brood
750 cap., perfect cond.
ea. Willard H. Stapleton
1, Lumber City, Ph. 363-

250 gal. cap. Wilso:
tank, 3 milking machin
400 lb. daily base, (milk shi
ped to Kimballs in Fitzgerale
also, 50 head of cows 2
heifers, mostly Holsteins. ]
Edith B. Keene, Abbeville

2 horse wagon wheels
frame, good body, old, $85
horse mower, I. H. McCort
ick Deering No. 9, like r
$25. Mrs. W. E. Tyler, Rie
Monticello. f a

Silent Flame tobacco
vester, A-1 cond., $600.
ling cultivator used ve
tle. $250. Jack Love,
Fitzgerald. :

Conveyer on wheels,
out motor, slightly used
also, practically new g
engine, $65. Felton R
Mauk.

One horse wagon,
cond., practically new,
good harness and high bo
$20., or will exchange
calf or young laying hen
J. Sullivan, Rt. 2,
Ph. 483-8397.

Automatic dry hog
like new, will feed
$40. Gaither Gibb
Toccoa, Ph. 886-482



ype). Jack Barnette, Box|}G
ay










iquipment

FOR SALE









50 gal. underground type,
ane gas tank in good
d., ready to go, $65. Hulon
a 1, Suwanee, Ph. GR.








tet of electric milkers, $75.;
an milk cooler, $25.; 7, 10
milk cans, $15. for all;
ner hay baler, $50. J. C.
:e, . 4, Commerce, Ph.
-3933 (No collect calls).

me each: Grain cradle,
d cond.; 2 H. Chattanooga
55 turn plow and 2H
ittanooga No. 92 turn plow
it wine); and No. 2 Oliver
{dle buster (no handles)
3 for $9.; hand corn shel-
$3.; 5-% ft. cross cut saw.
model 61 Foley saw filer,
0.; small kerosene chick
oder used one time, $6.
, Marlow, Rt. 1, Roswell,
428-7868 (Marietta) (no
ect calls).

ractor tires: two 11 X 28
one 12 X 28; 24 ft. elev-
+, Wise. motor, V-belts for
in and hay, and 12 wagon
2els; also, most any kind
horsedrawn farm _ tools.
n Goldin, Rt. 2, Temple.
562-3463 (after 8 p. m.).

oultry equipment, used
season, all new, 2 inside
| bins, 4 ton cap., ea., 32
ymatic waterers; 8, 1000
. Bas brooders; over 200
-type feeders, all for
Je-Jonn- oss, Jr, Rt:.3,
hran, Ph. 934-7187 (no
ect calls).

-30 International tractor
cubber; heavy double disc
cow; 5 disc trailer type
r on 600 X 16 tires, all in
ning condition, cheap. H
McCord, ;
-2670. (area code 404).

yhn Deere tractor MT,

ivater, turning plow, dise

, $450.;

riding cultivator, good

.. $35. Herman Austin,
Ke gton. i

54 Ford pick-up, 6 cyl.,

k in g cond., good

attle beds, $425. V. O.

cer, Rt. 1, Rockmart, Ph.



























ed. size Case tractor with
ter, new planters and
tvators; Model A. John
re; harrow; D7-Caterpil-
See at my home. Mrs. R.
Viaynard, Tallahassee Rd.,
ans (at city limits sign)
LI. 6-7109.









arrow cross cut saw, long
igs, $7.50; cotton scales
and one pick used to dig
cow manure, $1. W. RK.
. Sylvester.

2w Holland hay baler, No.
excel. cond., $1250.; New
and, 6 ft. blade, mowing
aine, pull type, $250.;

Holland side delivery

rake, $300.; -sub-soil
, never used, $125. All
be seen at my farm at
ras, 6 mi. north Newnan.
3. Bowen, 316 Peters St.,
. Atlanta 3, Ph. MU. 8-
_Cuntil 5 p. m.).

rm Master milk pasteur-
1 gal. capacity, like new,
only few times, $15, D.
tough, Locust Grove, Ph.
(Griffin).

55 and 1956 W. D. 45
Chalmers tractors, and
sets of cultivators; set of
ters; high lift type sub-
T; grain drill and 22 H. P.
er engine. Can be bought
tate or together. Harold
2y, Flippen (5 mi.
onough, Hwy. 351).

H. P., 5 gear, garden tr-
* and equipment, $150. at
place. D. T. Gates, Rt. 1,
ilton.

lis Chalmers Model B.
or with cultivators, pl-
t, distributor, disc har-
power take-off and hy-
lice lift, $400.; also, Far-
Cub with planter, distri-

cultivator, mowing
vine, disc plow, and hand
). Mervy S. Banks Jr.,
Blvd., Dr., S. E., Atlanta
3 DR. 3-0066 after 6




































Norwood, Ph. 3

10 ton truck scale
22 ft., already removed from
pit, $250. Carlos D, Ahly, Rt.
2, Baxley. i

Roto tiller in first class
cond., 3 H. P. motor, not used
over 35 hours. J. T. Adcox,
Route 2, Norton Road, Cony-
ers.

3 point hitch, John Deere
make, will fit A. model, 60 or
70 John Deere tractors, $50.
W. L. Wynn, Rt. 1, Chester,
Ph. EL. 1-5336,"





Fuel oil tank, 280 gal. cap.,
ideal for farm use, $30.; 4
wagon wheels, $5. ea.; shal-
low well pump with 30 gai.
tank, $25. W. H. Williams, Rt.
3, Conyers, Ph. 483-8072 (no
collect calls).

1958" M.H. FE. 40 H.. P.
Workbull tractor with Davis
backlass and front-end loader
for sale, or will trade for
Sealtest milk base or beef
cows. J. R. Buchanan, Fell-
wood Rd., Rt. 2, College Park,

955 John Deere 50 tractor
with 3 point hitch, live PTO
and .power troll and lights;
front mounted cultivator; 2,
16 ft., J. D. bottom plow with
gauge wheel and coulters; 7-
% John Deere RW harrow on
wheels, all for $1500. or will
sell separately. E. H. Will-
iams, Leslie Road, Leesburg,
Ph. 759-6500.

24 hanging chicken feeders
$1.50 ea.; 7 egg baskets,
ea., or all for $40. Mrs. F.
Shaw, Rt. 6, Tifton.

Cut-off saw and 9 H. P.
David Bradley motor, on me-
tal stand, good cond., $110.
Charles Avery Jr., Box 40,
Riverdale, Ph. 461-7319 (Fay-
etteville) not collect.













$1,
H



one p Ie
Machine shop tools for sale,
reasonably priced. Mrs. T. P.
Garrett, Route 1, Box 57
(Hwy. 17) Elberton.

5 deck electric brooder for
chickens or quail. T. G. O-
eres Maysville, Ph. 652-

Ly







_ 6 row sprayer cotton duster
in A-1 cond., Dobbins make,
for any tractor. No letters ans.
L. P. Higginbotham, Elberton.

Girton Deluxe bulk milk








Allis Chalmers late model

C.A. tractor with snap coupl-

er, live PTO, power adjusted
wheels,
in. bottom plow; 20 disc ball

bearing harrow set of cultie



vators, all used very little
(ess than 200 hrs). Pick ue
H. B. Ray, Loganville, i
826-2201 (not collect). :



7 all wire rabbit cages with
feeders $4. ea., or will trade |

for pigs. Bill Huff, P.O. Box
3032, Decatur, Ph. BU. 4-

tank, all stainless steel, 650} 2118

cap. with 5 H.P. compressor,
like new cond., very reason-
able; also, feed mixer, 14% ton,
upright Whirlwind, excel.

cond., very cheap. Mr. Kell
Morekis, 9511 White Blut
Rd., Savannah,



Kut-Kwick saw, good cond.,
clutch operated, $50. John S.
Williams, Route 2, Pelham.
Ph. 294-3307.

5 deck electric brooder in
A-1 cond., $35. Mrs. Eunice
Nelson, 21 King Road, Dalton,
Ph. 278-6774.





Ph. PO. 7-0323.
Well drilling machine, 22W
Bucyrus Erie, good cond.,

with all necessary tools. H. W.
Fuller, Talmo.

Two Dari-kool coolers, 360
gal. size ea., excel. cond., 8
Surge milking units,
cond. W. T. Greer Sr.. 502 E.
Conyers St., Covington, Ph.
786-2713 (no collect calls).

Horse drawn cultivator, Pl-
anet Jr., with discs and duck
feet; Sears stationary wood
saw, belt driven; several 350
cap. and 500 cap. elec. chick
brooders and 12 feed troughs,
price to sell. R. S. Reynolds,
Rt. 3, Monroe.

Steam engine 11-16 center





crank, 60 or 70 H. P., $500..

Good for cotton gin or other
farm use; also, dust collector
blower and blow pipe. Maggie
Fane Folkston, Ph. 496-



1956 Intnl. R-185 with 32
ft. Tandem trailer in good
cond. Will sell separately at
reasonable price. Hugh Crook,
Rt. 2, Montezuma, Ph. 5641.

Sherman backhoe mounted
on 640 Ford gasoline tractor.
8 ft. dip stick, good cond.,
$1,600. F. O. B. my farm. J.
Henry Anderson, Rt. 3, Cov-



ee cor Seavcalleye | ee 0% FP. 788-0988 (not col-



Roto-Spader, 1962 model,
with Briggs-Stratton motor
and equipment, -pitch forks,
mowing blade, shovels, rakes.
hoes, set of harnesses, steel
singletree, Gee-Whiz turner
and singlefoot; also, family
size elec. churn. G. G. Shelton,
Rt. 3, Lawrenceville.

1949 Chev., % ton, panel
truck for sale. W. M. Cochran,
2219 Rock Chapel Rd., Lith-
onia, 482-8434,

good 0

2 horse wagon practically
new, with original paint, com-
plete with springs, seat and
sections, $45. Clyde Shahan,
Rt. 3, LaFayette, (on LaFay-
ee and Dalton Hwy.) Ph. 6-

Massey-Harris No. 301 gr-
ain drill, 12 ft. width, no fer-
tilizer box but has both small
grain and grass seed boxes
in good cond. See at Breed-
leves dairy farm, Monroe,
Preston Breedlove, Monroe,
Ph. 267-5214,

Complete irrigation outfit;
Fairbanks Morse 4 in. pump
and V8 motor approx. 1000 ft.
of 4 in. pipe with all fittings,
elbows, Ts and_ sprinklers,
reasonably priced. J. C. Holt,
Rt. 2, Lenox.

5 ft. crosscut saw, and 5-%
ft. crosscut saw, $8. ea., or
both for $15. Joe C. Hickman,
1693, E. Clifton Rd., N. E.
Atlanta.

1954 Ford pick-up truck, 6
eyl., good cond., good tires,
$400. Henry Whitley, 4516
panes St., Doraville, Ph. 448-

A. C. 66 combine with pac-
king platform and blade lifts
with remote ram, in good
cond. He: . Craven) Rt 6,







12 inch Hammermill with
sacker, chain feed, mounted
on axle, 2 wheels, rubber
tires with hitch to use for
pulling behind tractor or
truck, jam-up cond.; also, 7
H.P. gas engine, Briggs and
Stratton make, good shape,

8 dise King bush and bog
harrow, lift type, good shape,
$150.; 3 point hitch; 2 row
stalk cutter, practically new,
$90.; stationary cut-off saw
and 5 horse power Intnl. en-
gine, all. in good shape, $75.;
practically new 1 row, mule
drawn, stalk cutter, $50. S. G.

Mayfield, Rt. 2, Fayetteville,
Ph. HO. 1-3473.

Farm wagon, with good

rubber tires, wired for lights,

and well built, $80. Mrs.-Mack
Clark, 211 W. Madiison, Ash-
rn.

priced to sell or trade for hay, | bu

corn or cattle. J. N. Young,
Rt. 1, Carrollton, (Hickory
Hwy.).



Reconditioned Gravely
tractor and sickle bar, rotary
plow, middle plow, riding
sulky and 30 in. rotary mow-
er, all for $300. C. T. Gallo-
way, 553 Chappel Rd., NW,
Atlanta 18, Ph. SY 4-5327.

Dairy equipment: Majonni-
er-Dawson C.P. paper carton
filler with 45 gal. stainless
steel supply tank, 10-H.P.
lookout vertical coal boiler,
brine pump, two 10 can wet
coolers with compressors and
one 8 can wet cooler with
compressor, in good cond, rea-
sonably priced. Mrs. Harrie
Jones, Rt. 1, Carrollton, Ph.
TE. 2-3146.

Set of dual adapters for
converting 6 hole Chevrolet
or G.M.C. % ton pickups to
dual wheels, used but per-
fect. Will increase capacity
and power, $35. Frank C,
Houpt, 645 Darlington Rd.,





NE, Atlanta 5. Ph. CE. 3-
7308. 7



Farmall A. tractor, good
working order and has good
rubber tires, planters, Tygart
duster and all other good
tools. E. B. Smith, Rt. 1, Box
503, Bainbridge.



Carrollton (near Bates_ store,
Newnan).

John Deere tractor, H. mo-
del in, running cond., with
disc harrow plow and cultiva-
tor, in useable condition. Ho-.
ward L. Copeland, Rt. 2, Box
237, Albany, Ph. HE. 5-3144.

John Deere M. C. Crawler
tractor in good _ condition.
James L. Herndon, Rt. 1,
Tarrytown (7 mi. E. of Soper-
iat and 1 mi. off Hwy. .No.







_ 4 underground electric hea-
ting cables, approx. 25 ft. ea.,
controlled by thermostat,
suitable for use in heating hot
bed for growing tomatoes or
other tender vegetable plants.
Used less than 6 mos., $20. at
my place or shipped exp. col-
lect. Mrs. J. W. Jones, Mad-
ison.

Electric Farm Master in-
cubator, 1,000 egg capacity, 4
trays with lever turner, like
new, $75. cash. Mrs. R. A.
Armstrong, 1309 Briarcliff
Circle, Macon.







3 roller canemill with red-
uction gear, belt driver, set
up on pressure treated 4 by 4
inch wood frame, all bolted
together. Can be driven with
truck, car or tractor. 70-gal.
metal lined juice box with 1-

-|1/4 in. drain valve in bottom,

10 gal. syrup kettle with 4
kerosene burners with cont-
rol valves. Make offer. James
L. Braswell, 512 Third St.,
wee Robins, Ph. WA, 2-

Brooder, Sears Roebuck,
500 capacity, used very little



and other poultry equipment.

including automatic waterers
and hanging feeders. Mrs.
Lawson Peterson, Rt. 1, Box
226, Vidalia.

International tractor and 7
ft. mowing machine, tiller,
plows and attachments for tr-
actor, all for $1100. Mrs. Lou-
lla Fuller, 4083 Riggins, Mill
Rd., Macon, Ph. 746-8370.

Belting for all types of farm
machinery, or
dth. Joe



Joe




Taylorway 10 dise bush and
bog harrow. Works with hy-
draulic ram or pull rope, like

1951 Chev. 1% ton truck
with 1956 motor, in excel.
cond., with 5 ft. oak body, 12
ft. long, $375. W. H. Goodson,
Franklin, Ph. OR 5-3659.

Rotary type garden tractor,
Ig. size, 4 H.P. motor, with
400-8 tube type tractor tires,
priced to sell. Robert A. Bak-
Cia.) cvs, BOX) 265.0 a=
Fayette.

1956 R-190 Intnl., 6 cyl.,



truck tractor with 1000 x 20

tires, fifth wheel, saddle tanks
and straight air brakes, $2000.
D. E. Short, P.O. Box 115,

Sassar.



new. J. F. Johnson, Rt. 1,
Lithonia, Ph. 469-6281 (Stone
Mountain), (after 3 oclock).

Laying cages for 10,000
hens complete with feed and
water troughs, slightly used,
priced to sell. C. W. Hobbs,



Portable light plant, used
very little, $85., or half price

at my light plant, or will trade
for light chain saw, good cond.
A. C. Hopkins, 253 Birch St.,

Hapeville, Ph.
(not collect).

PO. 17-3735



1956 Jeep pick-up, 6 cyl.
with cattle body, $650., 0
best offer. Truck in good
cond. Milan Purvis, Patton
Dies Americus, Ph,

3 homemade brooders: one
old cypress brooders wired
for electricity, brooder 4 ft.



long with 8 ft. long runway; :

and two old cypress brooders
3-% ft. long with 6 ft. long
runway, all in good repair,

$25. each. Come see. W. W.

Massey, Box 116 Bronwood.

Super A Farmall tractor
and 2 dise turn plow, planter,
cultivator, disc harrow and 6
row duster. H. S. Vaughan,
Rt. 1, Kingston.

Intnl. B-275 Diesel tractor
with 400 hrs. use, including
equipment as follows: 2 bot=
tom plow; smoothing harrow;
planters and cultivators; sub-
soiler and dirt pan, all 3 point
hitch, in excel. cond., $3,000.
Red Evans, Rt. 4, Jackson, Ph.

587.





Kuhl egg washer, square
type stainless steel tub for
square baskets or round type;
12 square egg baskets used
part of one season, and 1}

plastic egg trays, all for less

than half price, $125. Ever-
ett Hunt, Rt.
Blairsville.

Garden tractor, Sears, 3

horse David-Bradley with
Continental motor; middle
buster, turning plow, disc

harrow, mowing machine and
cultivator with attachments,
all like new, $350. del. in 200
mi. radius, H. C. May, 2727
Lakewood Dr., Augusta, Ph.
736-5098.

Case hay baler with 12-%
H. P. Wisc. air-cooled motor,
used very little, in first class
condition, $250. Bobby Pil-
grim, Douglasville, Ph. WH.
2-3030.

500 gal. above ground But-
ane gas tank in A-1 cond., no
pipes with tank, $225. at my
home. Arthur Johnson Jr.





Jersey, Ph. 464-3653.



Route 2, Cordele Ph, 273-
1570.

Garden plow, 1956-1957
model, used very little, has
bottom plow, middle buster,
cultivators and cutaway har-
row, $175. T. E. Kipp, 903 7th
St., MeVay Heights, Cochran,
Ph. 934-6972 (after 4 p. m.).

Ford manure spreader, 75
bu. with 12 in. steel extra
sides for chicken litter, $125.;
ready to work, 1960 Fordson
Super Power Major with tri-
cycle frontend with power st-
eering, live hydraulic, raised
P. T. O., two-way adapter for
cylinder, good tires, 6 ply,
rear size 14 X 9 X 38, 1,680
hrs., top cond., $2800. Charles
J. Parker, Rt. 3, (Jersey)
Covington, Ph. 464-3819.

1953 John Deere M. C.
Crawler tractor with .Model
61 angle bulldozer blade, very
good condition. G. C. Thorn-
ton, Bradley, Ph. YU. 6-3643
(Gray).

8 ft. fertilizer spreader A-1
cond.; 6 row Tygart cotton
duster mounted on 1 horse
eart, good condition; John
Deere belt pulley, A-1 cond.;
and 1951 pick-up truck, clean
and in perfect running cond.















FARMER'S TAX GUIDE

The Internal Revenue Service has a free
booklet of tax advice for farmers of this area,
A. C. Ross, District Director of Internal Rey-
enue announced recently.

Called Farmers Tax Guide, it is avail-
able from county agents or the nearest In-
ternal Revenue Office. The free booklet is
written in non-technical language and con-
tains numerous examples showing how tax
rules apply in actual situations. A check list
of farm income and expenses and a sample
filled-in return form is included.

While the booklet was written primarily
to assist farmers in the preparation of their
1962 tax returns, it is also useful as a tax
reference guide throughout the year.





J. H. Brazier, Zebulon, Ph.
LO. 7-8797. eee Mig
Butler Meat k panes ate,





wide frontend; 2-16

924-

4, Box 100-2.

















































PAGE FOUR



Equipment

FOR SALE



1956 Ford truck, A-1 cond..
very clean. $750. Doyle Wil-
kins," Rt. 1, Woodstock Rd.,
Ashworth, Ph. 974-3506.

Good Year tractor tire, 9-
24, extra good, $20.; Firestone
tractor tire, 9-24, almost like
new, $25., or both for $40.
Arthur H. E. Dalgo, 1510
Washington- St., Nashville.

Sears piston type well
pump for sale, or will trade
for elec, welder suitable for
farm repair work. Will pay
some difference. T. R., Fin-
ley, Box 148, Waco.

Sprinkler systems portable
aluminum, 1376 ft., 6 in pipe;
244 ft.,5 "in. ae and 2612
ft., 3 in. with fittings and
rainbird heads, no pumps,
$2500. Ed Williams, S520
Habersham Rd., N. W., At-
Janta 5, Ph. CE. 3-0058.

9 H. P. Planter Jr. tractor
with turn plow, harrow, Gee
Whiz and extra plow points,
runs good, reasonable. C. L.
Mitchell, Rt. 1, Jones Rd.,
Roswell, Ph. 993-6369.

~1951 Willys jeep, 4-whl.
drive, engine just overhauled
and excellent body, $375.
Curtis Lewis, 2316 Johnson
Ferry Rd., Atlanta 19, Ph.
457-5464.

250 gal. Dairy Kool milk
tank in good cond., No. 75 De-
Laval vacuum pump, good as
new, with 2 units and 1 stain-
Jess steel wash vat, all for

_ $1,000., or will sell separately.

Charles T. Walker, Rt. 1,
the Rock, Ph. 474-R (Barnes-
ville).













John Deere 12-A combine
power take-off, $200.; Jchn
Deere 4-disc tiller for M. or
MT tractor, $50. Cannot de-
liver. James A. Bower, Rt. 1.
Alma, Ph. 632-5435.

_ 4, 24 inch, Athens tiller
dises in good shape, $6. ea.
Mark T. Warren, Dewey Rese.

Farmall M tractor with
Super M moter kit, and new
paint, good cond., recently
painted, $875.; Ford 8N tractor.
1949, with Dearborn frontend
loader, rotary hoe and 2 Cov-
ington planters, all good
eond., and dirt and_ silage
buckets for loader, $695.; J. S.

_, Wilson, Monticello.

Equipment

WANTED









Want post hole auger, bro-
ken or junked, but usable;
and farm tools, plows or at-
tachments. Prefer mule dr-
awn types; also, have black-
smith tools for sale or trade.
Thomas L. -Gravitt, Rt. 2,
Jonesbridge Rd., (Newton
District) Alpharetta, Ph. GR.



Want farm pick-up truck,
% or 3/4 ton. Will trade 1953
6 cyl. Ford 2-door for pick-up
of equal value. E. L. Moassen,
2235 Starline Dr. Decatur,
Ph. BU. 9-8339.



Want circulating pump in
good cond., with 1/4 power
motor. State price and parti-
culars in first letter. Mrs.
Owen Manning, 215 Sunset
Blvd., Albany.

Want Farmall Cub tractor
with power lift, cheap, to fix
up my tractor, or yours. State
what equipment yours will
need to put in good condition,
and price. Answer before
February 6, if possible. Des-
mond T. Doss, Rt. 2, Box 207,
Rising Fawn.





. Want 1 row cultivator for
John Deere H. tractor. C. L
Hardin, 5884 Buford Hwy.,
Doraville, Ph, 457-8983.

Want Model G. Allis Chal-
mers tractor, planters and
cultivators in good shape, and
food peach sprayer, 300 to
500 gal. tank with pick-up
pump. State price and cond-
ition first letter. All letters
answered. Hugh H. Kiser, ne
21, Milner, Ph, 594-W..





Want tractor tire, size 14 X
30 in good cond., and Farmail
Super G, or 200 tractor motor
block, goed cond., or one that
can be rebuilt. eR: P. Ivey.
Rt. 8, Macon.

Want D-6 Cat. angle dozer
with cable control; 8-10 yd.
pan. Both must be in good
cond., and reascnably priced.
J. A. Chastain, 3605 Harden
Ave., Brunswick.





gate valves in good working
cond. W. L. Wilson, P. O. Box
889, Thomasville.

Want post hole diggers for
3 point hitch tractor or Far-
mall Cub fast hitch, reason-
ably priced for cash. Will
come after. M. L. Frey, 5755
Memorial Drive, Stone Moun-
tain.

Want post hole digger to fit
Farmall cub tractor with fast
hitch. R. L. Jones, Rt. 1, Box
482, Riverdale, Ph. 478-6357
(Jonesboro).

Want 1 or 2 used _ tractor
tires, size 11 X 28 in good
cond., with % tread or more.
Pilot Filmore, Rt. 3, Box 172,
College Park, Ph. 478-7050
(ne collect calls).

Want egg washer, G. L. F.
10 cs. cap. Must be in top
shape. Quill Jordan, Toccoa,
Ph. 886-2912.

Want 1952-1954 Ford or
Chev. pickup truck; also, have
for sale: iron fence post and











for electric fence and other
farm equipment. Mrs. S. F.
Robinson, 1297 Dixie Hwy.,
Jonesboro, Ph. 478-8084 (no
collect calls).

Want 1953 or later Ford tr-
actor. Write and give price
of tractor and attachments
separately. Harry N. Meret,
1869 Langdale Dr., Decatur.

Want hydraulic lift, all as-
sembly, for Farmall M. S. W
Few, Apallachee, Ph. 278R
(Madison).

Want planters and cultiva-
tors for A. M. Farmall tr-
actor; also, want a poison
machine. J. H. Farmer, Rt. 2,
Bogart.

Want pull type rotary mo-
wer for Cub tractor and drag
tooth harrow. EK. M. Hayes,
Rt. 5, Marietta, Ph. 943-5879.

Want 1952 Ford tractor,
good cond., and bush hog and
other equipment at bargain
price. W. H. Ellenburg, 4954
Peachtree-Dunwoody Rd., N.
E., Atlanta 5: -













good cond.; 1 row, pull type
corn snapper for hook-up to
Super C. International Har-
vester tractor (no sheller or
husker attachments) also, gr-

on chassis combined with en-
gine, feed mixer, grinder and
molasses mixer. Quote price,
cond. and location. P. J. Lip-
ory, Rt. -1, Hawkinsville, Ph.
892-2578.

Want front dozer blade for
model 60 Cub International
tractor. Must be A-1 cond..
complete, within 100 miles of
Atlanta and cheap for cash.
Grady Harris, Quillian Rd.,
Dalton, Ph. 278- 7987.

Want drag pan, one or two
horse, also
tractor tire in good cond. C.
HE. Thomas, Rt. 3, Feagin Rd.,
Macon, Ph. 788-1338.

Want 3 point hitch to fit
model 50 or BY John
Deere tractor. Clifford Woot-
en, Rt. 4, Cuthbert.

Want old fashioned hand
operated corn grinder in good
working cond. to. use for



es. T. Massey, 505 E. Elm St.,
Rockmart.

Want set of truck scales,
weigh up to 30,000 lbs., with
steel beams, located anywhere
in North Georgia. Harold
Brannon, Rt. 2, Box 1, Fair-
mount, Ph. 337-5707.

Want Bermuda grass rake,
mule or tractor drawn, in
good cond., and reasonably
priced. W. B. Kelley, Rt. 2,
Buchanan,

Want John Deere No. 60
tractor fuel burner with live
power shaft and powertrol;
and late model B. A, or G.
John Deere with Rollermatic
frontend and powertrol. Must
be fuel burner: and in good
cond. not junk. H. C. Allen,
Rt. 3, Box: 388, MoD one tee
ohPh. 423-3379. 4. :







Want two 5 in. used water |:

wire; pole wire can be used |

Want used culti-packer in |;

ain drill and feed mill unit |

900/9:50 x 24|]

grinding chicken feed. Charl- i

MARKET BULLETIN.

Want metal creep feeder,
for calves, in good cond., and
John Deere land leveler, or
soil mover made by Killifer,
6 or 8 ft. wide. J. L. Gunn,
Warrenton, Ph. HO. 5-3369.

Want good pick-up truck,
prefer with cattle body. Will
trade 1956 Plymouth station
wagon, clean, runs good, with
radio, tires and heater. See_at
Broden. Otis O. Turner, Rt.
1, Newborn.

Want set of weights for
rear wheels of Ford tractor.
State price. Ode Wilson, Rt.
1, Murrayville.

Want speed reducer unit to
build up power on 5 HP.
Wisconsin motor, or what
have you. J. M. Nall, 44 Fes-
sondere Dr., Austell.



size bulldozier, reasonably
priced. W. R. Christian, Box
186, Colbert, Ph. ST. 8-7262.

Want good used Super A.
Farmall tractor with all
equipment. J. T. Braxton, Rt.
2, Washington, Ph. OS. 8- 2495
(not collect).

Want steering assembly No.
8N 3503B for 1950-51 or
752 model Ford tractor. Ralph
E. Moore, Statesboro.

Want John Deere 620 or 60
model tractor with or with-
out late model planters and
cultivators, or 3 point hitch,
reasonably priced. L. J. Wash-
ington, Riz 1 Jackson; Ph:









Want old style Tower edg-
er, 42 in. or larger, or other
make if large enough. Will
buy according to cond., am in
position to have one recon-



rake in A-1 cond. C. M. Phil-
lips, Box 187, Jesup, Ph. GA.
7-2401.



Want % or 3/4 ton pickup
bed for Ford or Chevrolet, in
fair cond. and cheap, or will
exchange 4 x 4 x 10 ft. locust
post for same, located North
of Atlanta. Willie Head,
Suches. : :

Want. good used automatic
poultry feeder with 440 ft. of
trough and chain, cheap for
cash, located anywhere No. of
Atlanta. State what you have,
price and cond. Clyde W.
Garrett, Rt. 3, Blairsville.

Want W D Allis Chalmers
tractor with good rear-end
housing for repair parts. State
price. All letters answered.





Want rotary m
Cub tractor. W. J.
grast, 3398 Briarcliff Rd., At-
Janta 6, Ph. ME. 4-3222.



Want to buy med. or lg.|

ditioned if necessary. J. ae
Armour, Rayle.

Want New Holland ~ hay
baler P.T.O. operated, and



Want D-7 Bulldozer 9 G7
model. Write cond. and price.
W. F. Simmons, Box 115, Li-
thonia.

Want small used Diesel en-
gine. One from wrecked or
damaged tractor will do.
Must be reasonable. William
E. Suber, 1430 Elizabeth Ave.,
Perry, Ph, 429-1801.

Want 4 whl. drive jeep,
good cond., and reasonably
priced. Kenneth Bandy, Rt. 2





Dandere



















&
heifers, excel, |
come see. Roy Goddard
cee (Klondike), P

Eileenmere
sonably priced. Hugh
Rt. 2, Montezuma, Ph. 5!

be ready for service EF
March, $150. and up. Fre



Ringgold, Ph. 935-3470.

Livestock

FOR SALE





Cattle

2 Reg. Guernsey cows, fresh
with second calves, both have
heifer calves at side; and one
Jersey, fresh and with heifer
ealf, $825. for all 3 cows and





their heifer calves. F. H.
Bunn, Midville.
65 feeders, mostly steers,

some heifers, approx. wt. 300
400 lbs. Whiteface and Black
Angus, sell entire lot by lb.
or herd, all have been cast-
rated,. dewormed, deloused,
Vac. for cold and black leg.
S.'B. Duncan, Rt. 1, Royston,
Ph. 245-8729 (no collect
calls).

19 Reg. Jersey heifers, 3
bred to freshen in August; 9
breeding age and 7 from 5
mos. to one yr. old. All are
A.B.S. daughters and from
one of the better Jersey herds
in the state. Charles T. Wal-
ker, Rt. 1, The Rock.

40 Holstein, Jersey and
Guernsey, first calf, heifers,
to calve in the next 60 days,
wt. 700-1100 Ibs. Can deliver.
R. G. Reynolds, Rt. 3, Monroe,
Ph. 268-4032.

Thoroughbred Hereford
male calf, born 4-8-62, good
markings and dark red color,
$125. Adam Whitaker, Rt. 1,
Blue Ridge, Ph. 632-5548.

Reg. Angus springer heifer,
$250.; 3 cows with calves at
side, $300. and $350. ea.,







granddaughter O.B. 13th.; al-

so, Reg. Angus bulls, 9 mos.
old, $200. All calfhood vac-
cinated and from clean herd.
Guar. Breeders. F. W. Phil-
lips, c/o Westover Farm, Ken-
nesaw, Ph. 428-2959 (Mari-

































































2 polled Hereford cov
yrs. old, Reg. in both
one has bull calf an
bred to Reg. bull.

Oo Maysville, Ph

Santa Gertrudis bull
bred and Reg., many
for use on commercial
George Halderby, c/o
Cattle Farm, Syivee
776-2429.

2 Reg. Black Angus
one with heifer calf,
old, other with bull
mos. old, all four, $80
Greene, 138 Garland
Decatur, Ph. DR. 3-98

Fine 4 yr. r
milch cow, now gi
1s. daily, when
gives, - 5 gal.
$150. Jack B. Fowler,
Rt. 1, Ellabell, (near
nah), Ph. 653-2599.

Reg.

yearlings and a

age; also, 12 Reg. cow.
calving and mostly
calves at foot, by
Homeplace Eilleenmere
John C. Nicholson,
Top Farm, Rt. 5, Rom

Reg. red Angus bul
ie yearlings and 2
sired by gains tested
George W. Gibson,
Rome. S

Nice Angus bull.
old, $175. Gel. and =
pers, furnished, is



fof 1956 Int'l. Geng
aplon.C: :

N. McCh
sonville, Ph. 265-2266.

Pureblood polle
face heifer calf, 5
$100. Jessie Shahon
LaFayette Dalton
Fayette, Ph. 60840.

Reg. polled Hereford
21 mos. old, one of fin
a stock pull, $300. for
sale. L. O. Lusk, 1024
Lendon Dr., Decatur,
3-5491.-



Homer L. Capel, Molena.

consulted.

right one.







etta).

The office of our state chemist frequently receives re-_
quests to analyze samples of feed believed to contain sub-
stances causing sickness or death in farm animals or poultry.

These requests come from people such as the farmer, a
county agent, a veterinarian, etc., and quite often have very
little information for us to proceed on.

In order for the state chemist to intelligently tackle
such a problem, he needs certain information. |
before a sample of such feed is sent, a veterinarian should be
In case of death, an autopsy should be performed
to determine whether death was caused by a disease or a toxic
substance. In the experience of the state chemists office,
the feed is rarely ever to blame.

If the veterinarian decides that it is a toxic substance, he
should indicate what he thinks it is. Otherwise, the chemis-
try laboratory may run numerous tests and still not hit on the
In addition to the veterinary report, the feed
guarantee tag should always be enclosed with the sample
Quite often there are various s drugs oicG which. are toxic if
the levels are too high. ia Spates




















First of all,











Ivestock

BOR SALE



~~ Cattle

Holstein heifers with first
es less than a mo. old for
J. L. Burrell, Rabun



uernsey and Jersey cow,
calf now 3 wks. old, heif-
calf by Whiteface bull,
1, $175. Paul Browning,
vertstown.

Jl types of beef and dairy
Je for sale or trade. Bob-
Pilgrim, Douglasville, Ph.
2-3030.

5 shoats, from 7 to 12 wks.
| $10. and $12. ea. Dams
dif. meat type breeds, sire
Reg. Berkshire, F. C. Sea-
:, Rt. 4, Madison, Ph. 861.

~~ Swine

urebred meat type black
and China boar, one yr.
this Feb., approx. 300 to
Yps., $50. or trade for 2
-d meat type hogs, wt. ap-
sx. 150-175 lbs. ea. J. O.
ag, Avondale Rd., Macon,
788-1657. ;

0 nice healthy pigs, 9







1 :
nes H. Kent, Rt. 2, Powder
i Ph. 943-3071.

10 S.P.C. and Duroc cross-
pigs, 8 wks. old, $10. ea.
-S. Haymore, Rutledge, Ph.
- 7268. : =

zandrace boar, 5 bred sows,
i111 pigs, 8 wks. old for
a, J. H. Peek, Rt. 1, Fair-
on, Ph. 964-4611.

Reg. Landrace boar, popu-
- ploodlines. W. L. Wells,
x 249, Rt. 6, Macon, Ph.
'. 83-8931. :

Reg. Bangs free, Tamworth
ars and gilts, best blood-
-es. J. S. Davis, Abba, Rt. 3,
-zgerald, Ph. 6541.
erry red Duroc male,
size, and gilts, worm-
and treated for Cholera,
minated in United Duroc
sn., $40.; bred gilts, $75.;
-o, all ages from weaned
. prices. A. C. Weath-

: O. Box. 37, Hwy. 32,
2rshon.

18 pigs, $10. ea. Mother of
2s full blood Spotted Pol-

China, male full blood
Jersey. Mrs. Loulla
er, Riggingsmill Rd., Ma-
, Ph. 746-8370.

Reg. Landrace, service age
ars and gilts for sale; also,
wk. old pigs to be for sale
b..22. Herman Roper, Rt. 1,
cutee, Ph. 2783 (Helen).

S.P.C. shoats, one gilt and

e Duroc boar, fine blood-

1es. Mrs, J. E. Carter, 3160

cMurry Dr., S.W., Atlanta
Ph. 344-1388.

Reg. as service age
var and , from Bee
anes M. T. ourson,
azlehurst, Ph. 5-2589. -
15 purebred Landrace pigs

% $15. ea. when
rohs bd: J.C:





















ennesaw, Ph. 427-6844.

Purebred Duroc male, $35.
will trade for double sec-
on drag type harrow. V. R.
olm, Rt. 1, Ochlochnee (3
il. W. of on state road 188).

Purebred Duroe boars and
Its. May be Reg. Leo Akins,
t. 2, Box 153, Metter (Lo-
ited 5 miles N. of Metter, 9
des S. of Twin City), Ph.
Wb =2073: 5

Reg. Hampshire boars, long
eat type, ready for service,
eated for Cholera and Ery-
pelas. Rudolph Gillis, Rt. 1,
operton, Ph. JA. 9-4764.

Pigs for sale. Hampshire-
andrace cross, Hampshire-
uroc cross; also, Hampshires
ad Durocs, all sizes, 8. and
p. Jim Hopkins, Rt. 2, Clay-
in. :















Poland China boars, bred
nd open gilts, treated for
holera. and Reg. in buyers
ame. From Bangs free herd.
7. T. Jennines, Rt. 2, Ameri-














Reg. Duroc bred gilts, bred
and open: gilts. Henry
Rt. 2, Harrison, Ph.

ilts, Duroc =
| crossed with Reg. Yorkshire

boars; also, Reg. Yorkshire
boars, unusually good blood-
lines, J. Frank Moore, Jr.,
vines 142, Vidalia, Ph. 537-

O.I.C. breeding stock, gilts
3 mos. old, $25. ea.; gilts 4
mos. old, $30. ea.; taking or-
ders for boar pigs ready
March 5, $25.; also, gilts, 6
mos. old, $35. ea. at farm, No
Sunday sales. Paul J. Cain,
Rt. 1, Commerce.

Reg. Duroc, boars and gilts,
meat type, cherry red, top
bloodlines, 4 to 5% mos. old;
also, 2 nice bred sows to far-
row May 1. Henry Harrell,
603 Gill St., Hazlehurst, Ph.
FR. 5-2035.

Reg. Hampshire hogs, from
some of best bloodiines, bred
gilts, and open gilts, and boars
for light service. One service
boar. Good selection to choose
from. All treated and_ free
from disease. Located 10 mi.
S.W. Eastman, near hwy. 87.
C. G. Steedstill, Rt. 1, East-
man, Ph. 374-3908.

Horses, Mules & Ponies

Good 5 gaited American.
saddlebred show horse geld-
ing, jet black, 10 yrs. old, 15
hands 2 in., exe. conforma-
tion, 3 white stockings, small
star on head, set tail. Top











-|money and ribbon winner in

1962. Sound and in good cond.
Shown under name Midnight
Raider. Call for appointment.
Miss Annette Schroeder, 1592
eran Cirl., S.W., Atlan-
ae LO:

Jennie, 5 yrs. old, broke to
plow, sound and fat, wt. ap-
prox. 600 Ibs., $60. Green
Greeson, Bethlehem.



At stud:

Quarter |

E P-133,280 b
Royal King and Out of Ban-
didos Joya; also, horses train-

Rt.|ed for roping, reining, cutting

and pleasure. Tony Hutch
Pe Box 47, Carroll-
on.

At Stud: Tom Dooley and
Shadows Ambassador, 2 top
Reg. Tenn. Walking horses, 2
dif. bloodlines. Roy A. Dor-
sey, 2561 Bohler Rd., N.W.,
Atlanta, Ph. CE, 7-1115.

7 yr. old bred Jenny, gentle
to ride and works anywhere,
wt. 700 lbs.; also, 2 horse wa-
gon in perfect cond., $75. See
Saturday or Sunday. W. S.
McMichael, Quitman.

Sheep and Goats

One nice white milk goat
just freshen, for sale. Ode
Wilson, Rt. 1, Murrayville.

20 top lambs, 25 ewes and
one Suffock ram. for sale. J.
T. Braxton, Rt. 2, Washing-
ton, Ph. OS. 8-2495 (no col-
lect calls).

3 mo. old butthead Nubian
billy, large for age, out of
heavy milker $10.; 4 white
milk goats with horns, to
freshen last of Mar. and first
of Apr., all have nice teats,
$12.50 to $20. ea.; At stud:
extra nice Saanan butthead
billy (not Reg-), fee $3. Lo-
cated 2 mi. So. of Courthouse
on U.S. 27. No Sunday sales.
Andrew Hamrick, Carrollton,
Ph. TE. 2-2772 (no collect
calls).

3 nice milk goats to fresh-
en soon, gives one gal. milk
when fresh; also, fine male
goat for sale. Mrs. Lee Kirk-
ley, 3860 Cascade Rd., S.W.,
Atlanta 11, Ph. 344-2581.











At Stud: 3 of finest Tenn.
Walking horse studs in Amer-
ica. At Midnight by Midnight
Sun and out of Merry Boy
mare; Go Boys Command by
Merry Boy; Society Dot by
Society Man. Come see and
pick the one you would like
to breed to. Barn located at
Johnsons Ferry Rd: at the
river, Sandy Springs, A. W.
Gay, 55 Lakeshore Dr., Avon-
dale Estates, Ph. BU. 9-0370.

Reg. Quarter horses, mares
bred to bull McCue P67.167,
will foal March, April and
May; 30 mo. old filly, open;
2, 9-mo. old, stud colts. All
priced for quick sale, or will
trade for Reg. Angus cattle.
Horses are gentle to ride. EK.
L. Burnsed, Manassas, Ph.
739-1970.

Black mare mule, wt. about
1050 Ibs., good work, $75. J.
D. Padgett, Rt. 3, Cochran.

Saddle horse, old and very
gentle, excel. for children,
saddle and harness, make of-
fer. Jack Fowler, Box 28, Rt.
1, Ellabell, Ph. 653-2599.

Shetland pony, black and
white, small type, gentle for
child to ride, no bad habits,
$125.; saddle and bridle,
practically new, $30.; 2 new
sets of pony harnesses, small
pony size, $22.50; regular



pony size, $18.50 Z. M. Addy,



618 Lee, Americus, Ph. 924-
9496. f
1,000 Ib. Quarter mare,

gentle but spirited, 7 yrs. old,
trained jumper and raiser, for
pleasure riding, $125. or trade
for gentle mare, horse or mule
that children can plow, of
same price, good shape. N.
Garner, Sr., Rt. 2, Trenton.

old, sorrell gelding

M. | Boardman,

Livestock

WANTED



Want beef and dairy type
cattle, within reasonable driv-
ing distance of Douglasville.
Bobby Pilgrim, Douglasville,
Ph. WH. 2-3030.

Want to buy one good mule,
must be sound and reasona-
bly priced. T. L. Powell, Rt.
1, Box 90, Lake Park.

Want to trade nice 7 mo.
old filly colt, red with black
tail and mane, black stock-
ings, white star in forehead,
halter broken, and gentle, for
larger horse or mare, gentle
to ride or will consider sell-
ing $125. Don Fortenberry,
Box 1221, Cartersville, Ph.
EV. 2-0522 (no collect calls).

Want saddle horse for chil-
dren, gentle, but spirited.
Prefer mare 3-6 yrs. old; also,
want beef type calf, 3-6 mos.
old, Gil Barton, Rt. 1, Lithia





Springs, Ph. WH. 2-3291.



Want one pony about 700
or 800 lbs. cheap. Isham Wil-
Jiamson, Rt. 4, Eastman.

Want to trade, small, 3 yr.

i and colt
for Reg. Black Angus heifer
about to calve. Major John
C. McClure, Rt. 2, Murdock
Rd., Marietta, Ph. 428-7648.

Want good carriage horse
not less than 1100 lbs. no
bad habits and very gentle;
also, want any style buggy
or cart and harness. A. P.
1001 Peachtree
Rd., Augusta, Ph. RE. 3-3180.



Solid black gelding, 3 yrs.
9 mos. old, 3 gaited, very gen-
tle, with black saddle, bridle
and blanket, priced for quick
sale. Ellis Morris, P.O. Box
787, St. Marys, Ph. 882-3208.

11 mo. old Walking horse
colt, halter broke. Robert La-
ramore, 1852 W. Vesta Ave.,
College Park, Ph. PO. 7-5455.

Nice Shetland pony stal-
lion, 8 yrs. old, reasonably
priced. Adam Whitaker, Rt. 1,
Blue Ridge.

Reg. Morgan horses: brood
mare, $500.; 2-yr. old stallign,
$350.; 3-yr. old gelding, $350.;
also, Morgan/Welsh _ filly,
$200. J. Ashbaugh, P.O. Box
10,016. Fairburn.

At Stud: Dark golden Pal-
omino. stallion, shown under
name, Step Easy Little Man,
will pick up mare, breed un-
til caught, and iet black Ara-
bian stallion, fee $25.; also,
for sale Palomino gelding, 3
yrs. old, anyone can ride.







os



aS Decatur, Ph, BU. 9-





Want feeder pigs (40-100
Ibs.) Can use up to 500 good,
clean quality pigs. R. S. Auld-
ridge, Blythe, (20 mi. So. of
Augusta) Ph. 592-4042. (He-
phzibah).

Seed & Plants

FOR SALE





Good, old fashion tender
bean seed: White Cornfield
beans, Germ. 98 pct., Little
Pink Peanut Six Wks, beans,
Germ. 98 pct., Cream, Six
Weeks beans, Germ. 96 pct.,
White Six Wks. beans, Germ.
97 pct., all 75c cupful; Red
Speckle Crowder peas. Germ.
90 pet., 50e cupful. Add _post-
age on all. Mrs. Carl Smith,
Rt. 3, Ellijay.

1963 Purple Hull Blackeye
Crowder peas treated for
weevils, either eating or for

: J. | seed.,,.Germ. 96 pct., 50c tea-
W. VanHorn, 4457 Covington

cupful. Add sufficient post-
age. Mrs. Johnnie Harmon,

Rt 2, Calhoun, : ae



Pensacola Bahia grass seed,

y|Germ. 60.50 pct.. Firm seed

31.50 pet., total Germ. 92 pct
C. H. Bird, Portal.



Good tender old time bean
seed: White Half Runner gar-
den beans, Germ. 98 pct.;
White Cut Short Cornfield
beans, Germ. 98 pct.; White
Creasback Cornfield beans,
Germ. 93 pct., each kind 75c
cupful; Red Speckle Crowder
peas, Germ. 95 pct.; Purple
Hull Crowder peas, Germ. 74
pet. each kind 55c cupful. No.
C. O. D. orders. Add postage.
Mrs. Preston Southerland, Rt.
3. Ellijay.

Tender Hull Garden Salet
peas, Germ. 79 pct., $1. tea-
cupful; White Tender Half
Runner Garden beans, Germ.
92 pct.; Tender Speckle Half
Runner Garden beans, Germ.
97 pct.; Little Pink Peanut
beans, Germ. 94 pct., each 65c
teacupful; Purple Hull Crow-
der Cowpeas, Germ. 93 pct.;
Blue Java Cowpeas, Germ. 91
pet., ea. 50 cupful. Add post-
age. G. T. Brown, Rt, 1, Ball
Ground.

Garden Bean seed: White
Half Runner Garden Bean
seed, Germ. 87 pct.; White Six
Weeks Bunch beans, Germ.
96 pct.; Pink Peanut Six
Weeks Bunch beans, Germ. 91
pet., all $1. for lge. cupful,
p. p. Mrs. Lee Reece, Rt. 2,
Box 77, Ellijay.

Old Time Tender Bean
Seed: White Cornfield Creas-
backs, Germ. 92 pct.; White
Six Wks. Beans, Germ, 90
pet; Large Old Time
White Half Runners, Germ.
83 pct., all 75c cupful; White
Mush peas, Germ. 88- pct., 50
cupful. Add postage. Mrs. Inez
Barrett, P. O. Box 35, Ellijay.

Old Fashion Bunch Okra
seeds, Germ. 87 pct. 45c cup.;
Black Striped Half Runner
bean seed, Germ. 97 pct. 50c
cupful,; Lge. Striped Sun-
flower seed, 25c cupful; Vine
Pomegranate seed, 10c_ tsp.
full; also Garden sage plants,
10c ea. Permit 16. Mrs. Leilar
ERITDs, Rt. 1, Box 214, Roys-
on.

Good Tender Cornfield
beans, Germ. 81 pct.; Little
White Half Runner beans,
Germ. 87 pct., 75c cupful, p.
p.; Speckle Crowder peas,
Germ. 81 pct.; Cream Mush
peas, Germ. 89 pct.; Green
Okra seed, Germ. 95 pet., all
50c cupful, p. p. Mrs. Bessie
Silvers, Rt. 2, Talking Rock. _

8 tons Pensacola Bahia
grass seed, recleaned and tes-
ted, Germ. 70.75 pct., firm
Seed, 20 pct., total Germ. 90.
75 pct., 20 lb. John L. Robin-
son, Box 36, Ailey, Ph. 583-
4409.















PAGE FIVE

Old Time Tender Half Run- ma
ner Garden beans, Germ. 94
.|pet.; Old Time Tender Spec-

kle Half Runner Garden
beans, Germ. 89 pet.; Old
Time Little White Tender
Half Runner Garden beans,

Germ. 88 pct., 70c teacupful;

3 cups, $1.90. Add postage,

Miss Gennie Brown, Rt. 1, ~

Ball Ground.

Good Tender Old Time
Bean Seed: White Cut Shorts,
Germ. 95 pct.; White Creas-
backs, Germ, 95 pct.; White
Half Runners, Germ. 90 pct.,
each kind 75c cupful. Add
postage. Mrs. Emory Goble,
Rt. 3, Ellijay.





Pensacola Bahia grass seed ~

18c lb., (cheaper in lge. lots)
Germ. 61 pet., firm seed, 22
pet, total Germ. 83 pct. C. M.
Pippin, Jr., Rt. 2, Albany, Ph.
HE. 2-7704.

Good Pure Knuckle Hull







peas, Germ. 66 pct. $7. bu.
P. B. Watson, Mauk. v4
Pensacola Bahia seed, 7

tons: Lot 1, purity 90.77 pct.,
Germ. 50 pct. firm seed, 40
pet. total Germ. 90 pct., Noxi-
ous weed, Johnson grass, 0.03
pct., 18 lb.; and lot 2, purity,
96.66 pct., Germ. 37 pct. and
firm seed, 53 pct. total Germ.
90 pct., no noxious seed. Wil-
lie B. Hunt, Rt. 3, Cuthbert,
Ph. 732-2370.

Strawberry plants, ever-
bearing, $2. C, or 200 $3.50;
Klondyke strawberry plants,
He C, or 200 for $1.75; 500,
Miss Lee Crow, Rt. 2, Gaines-
ville.





Sterns plum _ size

straw-=
berry plants, $2. C. p. i
ophane wrapped, prompt del.
weather permitting. Mrs. Z.
D. Dodd, Rt. 1, Box 223, Alp-
haretta.

Round Dutch frost proof
Cabbage plants, 300, $1.50;
500, $2.; 1000, $3.50, delivered

in Ga. Permit 38. R. Chancel=

or, Pitts, Ph. MI. 8-2035.

Cert. Bunch Puerto Rico seed
sweet potatoes for sale. Terry
D. Shaw, Rt. 1, Box 276, Due
West Road, Kennesaw, Ph.
428-7962 (Marietta).

Scupperneng plants from
Carters Vineyard, black and
brown, well rooted and damp
packed. Permit 86. B. O. Car-
ter, Rt. 4, Box 204C, Griffin.



Seed sweet potatoes grown ih:

from vine cuttings, Cert., very
nice, not strings, or cracked,
Ga. Reds, $2. bu.; Red Early
Sweets, $3. bu. at my place.
Containers not furnished, and
will not ship. L. W. Hutchin-
son, Jr. Rt. 1, Nicholls, Ph.
632-4854 (Alma). Call noon
or night, not collect.







If you've .cookie-

114 cups sifted enriched self-
rising flour
Y, teaspoon ground ginger
1 cup light brown sugar
% oe uneooked quick rolled
oats



| Makes 3 dozen cookies, -

*

A Nutritious SnackSpicy Peanut Crisps!

ungry youngsters around, make some Spicy:
Peanut Crisps just for them. These tasty drop cookies contain one:
of their favorite foods peanuts, plus a subtle spiciness of ginger.

You'll have no difficulty preparing these easy drop cookies,
Be sure to use enriched self-rising flour with the baking powder
and salt already added. And because this flour has added nutrie
ents three B-vitamins and iron, plus calcium it will also
make a nutritious family snack of these Spicy Peanut Crisps and all
the other baked foods you prepare with enriched -self-rising flour.
. Spicy Peanut Crisps are good childrens party fare also. Serve
them with ice cream and mugs of white or chocolate milk, ~~

SPICY PEANUT ORISPS %

, cup chopped, peanuts |

1 egg, beaten

4 cup melted shortening or
il

oi
2 to 3 tablespoons milk
Y, teaspoon vanilla extract

|

Sift together flour and ginger. Blend in brown sugar and rolled)
oats. Stir in % cup chopped peanuts. Combine egg, melted shortene:
ing or oil, 2 tablespoons milk and vanilla extract. Add liquid to
flour mixture, stirring until well blended. Add more milk, i
necessary, to moisten all dry ingredients. Drop by teaspoonfule
onto lightly greased baking sheets. Bake in moderate oven (375;
F.) 12 to 15 minutes or until lightly browned,

Delivered. Permit 301.

Dp. 1ns
Ga. Minimum order 100. Cell-















ants, well rooted and damp

you dig them. Permit 326. T.

\ PAGE SIX



Seed & Plants

FOR SALE



Trees for sale: Apples,
Rome Beauty, Red and Yel-
low. Delicious, Yates, Horse,
Early Harvest Kinnard, Black
Ben, Terry Winter, Black
Twig and Ark. Black, 2 yrs.
old, 50c ea.; Grapevines, Con-
cord and Delaware, 20c ea
p. p. on orders cf $5. or more.
Permit 214. Ray Saxon, Rt. 4,
Cleveland.

Combine Cowpeas, Germ.
92 pct., needs recleaning and
new bags, $4. bu. for lot; $4.50
on smaller orders; Rebel Soy-
beans, Germ. 89 pct. (2nd yr.
from Reg. seed), $3.75 bu.
cleaned and bagged; or $3.40
as is, bagged; Clemson Soy-
beans, .11 pct. other crop
(Cowpeas), Germ. 90 pct.,
3.50 clean and bagged; or
3.15 as is, bagged. J. O. King,
Avondale Rd., Macon, Ph.
788-1657 (not collect).

Seedling pecan trees at
our price, you dig; also,
ronze-White Scuppernong
Vine cuttings, unrooted, 10c
ea. plus postage. Permit 386.
Miss Ardelle Segler, Ochloch-
nee.

Apple trees: Red and Yel-
low; June; All Summer; Hor-
se; Red and Yellow Delicious;
Stayman; Yates; Black Twig,
55c ea.; 2 yr. trees (larger)
80c ea.; Peach trees: Elberta;
Ga. Bell; Mayflower; Hale,
55c ea.; Pear trees; Kieffer
Sugar, 75c; May Cherry, 75c,
all 1 yr. size; Grapevines:
Concord; Niagara; Lutie, 2 yr.
size, 50c ea.; plum: Abundan-
ce, 60c; Pecans: Stuart, 3 ft.
$2.50. Del. by mail. Permit 46.
T. M. Webb, Rt. 3, Ellijay.

Red_ raspberry 6 clumps,
75c; Sarsaparilla, 6 plants.
70c; everbearing strawberry
plants 90c C; Catnip, 4 bunc-
hes, 60; Horsemint; Balm;
Tansy; Peppermints; Spear-
mint, 60c doz. plants; Garlic
plants, 70c doz. Add postage.
Permint 239. Miss L. M.
White, Rt. 1, Box 57, Dahlon-
ega.

Papershell pecan trees, pr-
ices start at $1.50: Write for
price list. Permit 448. Arthur
O. Sandison, P. O. Box 1046,
Albany, Ph. HE. 2-1474.

_ Now taking orders for
Hicks Broadleaf and White
Gold tobacco plants, tomato,
oa and eggplant plants
5., M. Send $1. per. M. with
order, ready March 15. Per-
mit 213. William E. Wisen-
baker, Box 25, Lake Park, Ph.
CH. 2-8043. :

Klondike















strawberry pl-

packed, $1. C. add 25 per 100
for postage and handling
charges. Minimum shipment
200 plants, Georgia orders
only. Permit 319. Mrs. Luther
S. Butler, 466 Page Ave., N.
E., Atlanta 7, Ph: DR. 3-1846.

_Tropical tomato seed, ori-
ginally from So. America,
prolific, most resistant to
fungus, heat, cold, drought,
peels without scalding, Germ.
- 87 pct., 50c C. plus stamped,
addressed envelope D. T
Gates, Rt. 1, Hamilton.

Large round, dark rind,
yellow meat, watermelon
seed, Germ. 87 pct., 50 seed,
10c; 150 seed, 25c, and stam-

envelope; 700 seed $1.
Add postage. Mrs. P, E, Tray-
_ dor, Rebecca.

500 bu. knuckle purple hull
peas. Germ. 65 pct., $10. bu.
at my barn. Felton Roberts,

Mauk.
er ee ne

Old fashion bean seed.
White Creasbacks Cornfield
beans, Germ. 91 pct., White
Cutshort Cornfield beans,
Germ. 83 pct., Big White Half
Runner Garden beans. Germ.
_ 95 pct., Little Six Weeks Pea-
_ nut Pink beans, Half Runners,
_ Germ. 96 pct.; all 75c cupful.
Add pestage, no stamps or
checks. Mrs. Andrew Wilson,
Rt. 1, Carters.

Blackmore (early) straw-
berry plants, 50c hundred,



E, Freeburgh, 123 Rex Road,
Morrow, Ph. 366-3737.

Pecan trees, up to 3 ft. $3.;
up to 6 ft. $5. Will bud them,
you to dig them. Permit 302.
C. W. Page, 149 N. Ave., N. E.,



Black Concord grapevines,
well rooted, 20 to 30 in., good
healthy vines, 25c ea.; also, 2
doz. pods hot pepper, 25c. Add
postage. Permit 128. H. F.
Seay, Rt. 2, Ellenwood, (3917
Panthersville Rd.).

Watercress plants, $1.25
hundred. Permit 110. Mrs. C.
C. Gentry, Rt. 3, Red Bud Rd.,
Calhoun.

Nice red raspberry plants,
cellophane wrapped or in pl-





astic, damp packed, $1.50
doz.; nice roots and herbs:
queen of meadow; devils

shoestring; yellow dock; and
May apple, 4 lb. lardbox full,
$1. Permit 241. Mrs. H. A.
Chastain, Rt. 5, Ellijay.

Inspected pecan trees: St-
uart, Desirable, Farley and
Elhott, 2-3 ft., $2.; 3-4 ft.,
ay 4-5 ft., $2.50; 5-6 ft.,
3. All orders shipped prom-
ptly. Permit 31. L. E. Brown,
Baconton, Ph. 787-5785,

Old fashion bunch okra
seed, Germ. 87 pct., hard
seed 5 pct. total Germ. 92
pet., 45e cupful; Black striped
Half Runner bean seed, Germ.
97 pct., 60c cupful; lge. Strip-
ed sunflower seed, 25c cup-
ful. Permit 16. Mrs. Leilar
Phillips, Rt. 1, Box 214, Roy-
ston.

Seed and Plants

Not Requiring Report
Or Inspection Permit
FOR SALE









Long handle dipper gourd
seed, 24 for 25c with stamped,
self-addressed envelope. H. P.
Holley, Palmetto.

Fresh gourd seed: Indias
King Cobra (lige huge ee



4 to 7 ft. long, 6 seed, $1.
C. Burnsed, Ellabell.

African Monster gourd
seed, 50c doz.; Dipper gourd
seed, 25c doz.; Bushel gourd
seed, 25c doz. All plus stamp-
ed, self-addressed envelope.
D. T. Gates, Rt. 1, Hamilton.

African Menster gourd seed,
Germ. 95 pct., can be grown
% to 9 t., 5 for $1. plus st=
amped, addressed envelope.
Mrs. Peggy G. Goolsby, Rt. 1,
Hamilton.

African Jumbo gourd seed,
50 in. around, 5 seed, 25c; 30
seed, $1.; Martin gourd seed,
25e pkg.; 5 pks. $1.; Indian
Wife Beater gourd seed, 6-7
ft. long, 50c pk.; Dipper,
small, 50c pk. Send stamped
envelope. W. W. Massey, Box
116, Bronwecod.

Flower Seed
FOR SALE

All kinds of flower seed,
teaspoonful, 25c, plus, post-
age. Mrs. Marion Howell, 311
East Pike St., Lawrenceville,

Old fashion dbl. mixed col-
or Touch-Me-Not seed, 25c
tbl. spoonful. Add postage.
Mrs, Dewey Ellis, Rt. 5, Box
58, Ellijay. :

_ Peony type dbl. Cracker-
jack Marigold seed in orange
and lemon yellow; French
Marigolds in bronze, yellow
and red-brown; also, old time
purple Bachelor Button seed.
All true to name, hand saved,
50c qt. p. p. Mrs. A. M. Grier,
Rt. 2, Alto. -

Dwarf Celosias, mixed cols.,
$1. half tsp. full of seed. Reset
planter after 5 in, tall, plant
in rows 18 X 1 im_ they like
rich soils, and ks # water.
Must be satisfied or money
returned. Fred. Stahi, Rt. 4,
Ellijay.

13 kinds of Cannas, $1. plus
35 postage; Day Lilies, Am-
aryllis, apricot color, and Um-
brella Palm, 25c ea.; Tube
Roses, 50c doz.; Daylilies, 15c
ea. Add postage. Mrs. W. E
Weoten, Rt. 2, Box 150, Cam-
illa. Permit 44.

Hay, Feed, Grain

FOR SALE













Good baled hay for sale at
my barn 3 mi. off Hwy. No.



MARKET BULLETIN

6 to 10 tons baled peavine
hay, $30. ton. W. A. Ray, Rt.
3, Hartwell, (Near Hartwell
Dam). .

150 tons Bermuda hay,
highly fertilized, baled without
rain. Mrs. C. L. Geiger, Al-
bany, HE, 5-3295.

Ready to start taking orders
for Coastal Bermuda, June
12-15, 1963 hay cutting or
Aug. 15 cutting, $25. ton at
field, and will deliver in 7 ton
lots, more or less, within 60
mi. radius, $30. ton; 60-80 mi.,
$32.50 ton; 80-100 mi., $35.
ton and you furnish 2 or 3
hands to help unload. S. J.
Clay, So. Walden Rd., Rt. 3,
Macon, Ph. 788-2975

Good bright peavine hay,
$1. bale, or $40. ton. George
A. Brown, c/o Rance: Newton
Farm, Broughton Rd. New-
born, (weekends only).









Game and Fowl

FOR SALE



Barbary and Chukar part-
ridges, $3. ea. Minimum of 4
birds shipped. Permit 52. H.
M. Hilliard, 219 Mellrich Ave.,
N. E., Atlanta 17.

Sev. hundred Bobwhite
quail, raised in lg. flight pens,
some select birds, $3. pr. Per-
mit 70; also, 3 pr. flying Mal-
lard ducks, 2 pr.; some ex-
tra drakes, $1.50 ea.; Golden
Sebright bantams, $4. pr.: $5.
trio. C. L. Cawthon, River-
dale, Ph. GR. 8-8106 (after 6
Dn).

Bobwhite quail, alive or
dressed; also, breeder quail,
$2.50 pr.; sev. pr. blonde qu-
ail. Permit 110. Willie Gault-
ney, Box 36, Reynolds, Ph.
TI. 7-4555.

Quail Eggs: Now booking
orders for Northern Bob-
white quail eggs. Birds are
paired, hen and rooster to as-
sure good fertilization, guar-
anteed fresh eggs. Small or
large orders, $12. C. Permit
26. Lumpkin Tyson, Rt. 2,
Doerun, Ph. 776-4162 (Syl-
vester). :

Few hundred Bobwhite
quail in flight pen, nice size
birds and fat, $1. ea.; breed-
ers, $2.50 pr.; mated prs., $3.;
also, sev. good quail cages.
well built, for sale. Permit 44
J. L, Reed, c/o Mrs. J.C.
Thacker, Rt. 2, Kennesaw, Ph.
974-6508.

White King pigecns, $3. pr.
Jack Crowder, c/o Melody
Brook Farm, Rt. 3, Windy
Hill Rd., Marietta, Ph. HE.
5-8656,

White doves, $5. pr.; Ring-
neck doves, $4. pr. Will ship
express collect, Send money
order. Miss Eve Wallace, 716
Myrtle St., N. E., Atlanta 8,
Ph. TR. 4-5152.

One Golden cock, 1960 hat-
ch and one Silver cock, 1962
hatch, for sale or trade for
other birds. Write stating
what you have. Thomas R.











E a Rr

Sev. white and sev. colored.
rabbits, does and bucks. Does
are either bred or ready to
breed; few young ones, fryer
size. Grown does, $2.50 ea,
buck free with 3 or more. Will
ship, you pay charges. J. R.
Baxter, Rt. 1, Chickamauga.

4 does and 1 buck rabbits
for sale, mixed, cheap. Mrs.
J. A. Whitlock, 4547 Her-
schel Rd., College Park, Ph.
POF T3700;

New Zealand vehite, New
Zealand red and Blue Dutcn
rabbits for sale. G. G. Shelton,
Rt. 3, Lawrenceville.

8 rabbits, 1 mo., 5 days old,
90c ea. Jewell Hood, 214 Vic-
tory Dr., Dahlonega, Ph, 864-
3929.

White rabbits, New Zea-
land whites and Californias,
$1. ea. at 6 wks. old. Mrs.
Mack Clark, 211 W. Madison,
Ashburn.

N. Z. white rabbits, pedig-
ree foundation stock for 11th
yr., superior quality, $15. to
$25.; also, rabbit fertilizer and
compound mixture, 75 bu. in
small lots; 50c bu. in larger
lots. C. W. Page, 149 North
Ave., N. E., Atlanta 8, Ph.
TR. 4-6452, :

Sev. hundred Bobwhite
quail, 200 Chukars, Tenn. Red
quail, all in lg. flight pens.
Write stating what you want
and ask for details; also, so-
liciting inquiries concerning
booking orders for quail eggs
to be available in 1963 lay-
ing season, large quantities.
Permit 10. J. L. Tade, 1328
21st St., Columbus.

Approx. 50 mixed pigeons,
not in pens free to anyone
who will take all. Mrs. Ruth
Melton, 59 Bates Ave. SE,
Atlanta 17, Ph. 377-6170.

















50 White King pigeons,
good shape, 75 ea. Cannot
ship; F. C. Seabolt, Rt 4,

Madison, Ph. 861.
Show type white Fantails,



mated prs., $3.; 8 wk. old.
youngsters, $1. ea.; also, 7
red Carneaux, $1. ea. AH
good, healthy birds. F. M.

Ogletree, Sr., Barnesville.

White King pigeons, large
show type, Foy and DuPont
strains, good producers of
squabs wt. up to 1-3/4 Ibs.
ea., -limited number availa-
ble. Write for info. R. Lamar
Brantley, Rt. 2, Box 79,
Wrightsville.

White King pigeons, choice
selected prs. excel. breeding
stock, guar. mated and band-
ed. Producers of 16-20 squabs





ea., $4. pr. J. J. Beaton, 305
Stephenson St., Waycross.

Poultry

FOR SALE.

I, O. Game stag, Claret,
Johnson Roundhead, crossed,
$2.50 ea.; or 2 for $5. and sev.
pullets, of same stock, $1. ea.
All 1962 early spring hatch.
Will ship Exp. collect. Mrs.





per yr., weighing 14-18 ozs.|S

-| bone type, $2. ea. Write
ype, $ oe

{ mond, Farmington.






: I ys)
Brandenberrys :
Dr. Saunders Roun
both breeds bred pure. $
15 eggs. Come by and
from nest. Also, lar
in these breeds, $7.50;
hens and pullets, $5. Tw
tered cocks, $10. Mrs.
Hill, 312 Warren
Atlanta, Ph. 378-2990.

2 yr. old cocks and hen
sale in good feathers, 50
breeding game cocks.

following breeds for
Clarets, and Brown
John, Stone, pure, and
gale, Faroler, cross and .
Hobson, Brown Red Hi
pure and few crossed, 2
old cocks, $10.; hens, $
Hobson B. Reds, $10. or 2
$5.; one yr. old bull stage
J. C. Dozier, Rt. 2, Box 27
Brunswick.

Highest quality white
horns 100, 8 mo. old pt
of finest 300 egg strain. ]
years only Cockerels us
sires were from hens with 3
egg trap-nest records, @
above, $150. for the 100
$1.65 ea. in small lots. Healt
breeders. Morris Sau
Glenwood, (will ship).

30 mixed hens now lay!
60c ea. Mrs. J. L. Burne

Rabun Gap.

40 laying hens for sa
(large white ones). Mrs
W. Maples Rt. 1, Box 96
Ground, Ph. 893-2032 (
ble Hill).

Araucanus chickens, layii
blue green, olive green,
and turquoise blue eggs, |
pr. hatching eggs, $2. d
plus postage, if mailed. Mi
J. R. Turner, Rt. 2, Hamp
ton, Ph. GR. 8-8265.

2 purebred Millie
Bantam hens and one roo
also 24 half breed Mille F.
hens and 2 roosters, 50c
also, 12 fryers, half breed
ea, Will not ship. Bring |
come after any day. H
Bates, Rt. 1, Alabama

Acworth, :











ys



















































































_Araucanus chickens, 1a:
pink, green, blue and
green eggs, $8. pr.; $12

express collect; Hatching

asst. colors, 40c ea.
parcel post. Send money
der. Mrs. Addie A. Edwanr
716 Myrtle St., N.E., Atlan
8, Ph. TR. 4-5152. ;

Silver Duckwing O.E. Gan
Bantams, gs us from

of the best breeding s
$2. ea.; $5.50 trio while th
last; extra cockerels, $1.
Shipped express collect. G.
Stahlkuppe, 2455 Union |
ag Atlanta 11, Ph. 3
668. s ;

Pure dark Cornish cocke
ready for service, large







































Dp




fore you come. H. W.



Purebred, large type da
Cornish from healthy, unre
lated, stock, 13 pullets ane
cockerels, weighing about
lbs. or more, $2. ea. or al
$20. These are not culls, bt
will make fine stock ch
ens. Eggs from same breed)












W. H. Hensley, Star Rt. B,



Kent, Rt. 1, Pinehurst.

Ellijay.

Reidsville.




$3. per 16. Maude Grange





mailed to you.





Atlanta 8, Ph. TR. 4-6452.

60, reasonably priced. D. L.
VanZandt, Dial.



At the 1955 session of the General Assembly the marks and !
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 write

our Department for application, and all necessary forms will be

There is no cost for this registration except the recording fee _
to the Ordinary of the County in which your cattle are located.

PHIL CAMP

Commissioner of Agr


















BELL,











T OWE

4

FOR SALE



t Games, one yr. old stag;
adheads, Top ies, So.
cgia White Hackle, laying
at, G. G. Shelton, Rt. 3,
renceville. :

sung Araucanus hens lay-
olue, green and olive eggs,
ea. Jack B. Fowler, Box
Rt. 1, Ellabell (new Sav-
ah) Ph. Pembroke, 653-

)

*

antams, about 30 for sale;
. Brahmas, 7 hens, one
ter, $12. J. H. Moss, 2188
on Rd., Decatur, Ph, 377-
iF

aowtype bantams, pr. bl-
Tail Japs. pr. Rhode Is-
. Reds, trio Silver Duck-
3s, 6 hens, rooster; Rhode
ad Reds, 1 pr.; trio of B.
Eng. Games; pr. yellow
f Cochin and pr. cf Silk-
also, pr. white rabbits for
. Cannot ship. Roy Mad-
a 1, Lawrenceville, Ph.

trios of black Rosecombs,
blooded line (no cross).
ed 2 young Cockerels in
rice now. Pullets laying
*, $5. trio. Charles T. Mas-
505 E. Elm St. Rockmart.

how type bantams, trio Sil-
; trio Cochin; also, chicken
ilizer, 50c bag. Mrs. J. E.
ter, 3160 McMurray Dr.,
wis Atlanta 11, Ph. 344-

ooking orders for eggs, $3.
15, and day old chicks, 50
from these breeds, White
sted Black Polish; Buff
ed Polish; Mattled Hou-
s; Araucanus; Eng. Red
1s; Lakenvelders: White
e Black Spanish; Anconas
| Leghorn; Buff Minorcas;
ver Spangled Hamburgs;
mon Faverolles; Silver
-horn; Blue Andalusians;
ver Penciled Rocks; Tur-
and Golden Campines. A.
Williamson, Sr., Rt. 6,
ne, Turner Chapel Rd.

0 bronze white gcbblers,
lbs. and up ea. From Pull-
m tested flock at my
ae. Will not Ship; also,
v taking orders for bronze
ite Turkey eggs and poults;
, guinea eggs and white,
one, speckled or mixed set-
gs of all 3 breeds. Orders
1 be filled as received. Miss
lelle Segler, Ochlochnee.

(0 white Guineas for sale.
W. Biggers, Sr., P. O. Box
4 Greenville., Ph. OR. 2-

: Poultry
Game, Fowl

WANTED

TORRECTION: Want one
, large grey doe and buck
bits, not over one yr. old.
_O. Dixon, 377 Grant St.,
3}, Atlanta 12, Ph. MU. 8-
8. (no collect calls).

Want to trade rabbit feed
d water crocks, one qt. and
_ gal. size. Waterers for
inea pigs. Jack Hinton,
Victory Dr., S. W., Atlanta
Ph. PL. 3-7939.





Want pr. of white ducks | 4

d trio of white Guineas,
eap for cash. Will pick up

near Lavonia. Raleigh
uitt, RFD 2, Lavonia.

Miscellaneous
FOR SALE

try eured meat hams,
Wb.; shoulders, 50c Ib.;
4e meat, 40e Ib. This is salt
red; also, Martin Gourd
2d, 25 doz. Comer Meeks,
.. 1, Alto. :

1-% ton Chev. truck (old
odel), fair body with good
in. floor, brakes, battery,
ansmission and rear-end
zee $200. Willie J:
. 1, Adel (6 mi.

, Adel on farm for-












James Con-

Je 0 con

00. Thomas Ward, Rt. 1,
Greenville, Ph, 622-4424,
Farmall MW. tractor, good
cond; row eern snapper to
mount on Farmall M. or H.
tractor. Will sell separately or
together. Used two seasons,
both in good condition, Mar-
vin Montgomery, Rt. 1, Man-
chester, Ph, 846-2881.





p e carbon p
pattern, $1., p. p. N
Mrs. Mamie Gable,
Dahlonega.

Gourds, up to 17 in cir. 10c
ea.; 18 to 20 in., $2.50; 21 to 23
in., $3.50; 24 to 30 in., $5.;
gourd seed 25c pkg.; $1. cup
in lg. quantities. Mrs. W. E
Wooten, Rt. 2, Box 150,
Camilla.

Rt. 3,





1952 Ford truck, 3/4 ton, 5
good tires, torn seat and one
cracked glass, runs good, st-
ake body, $450., or will trade
for % ton or later model and
pay difference. E. J. Southard,
Rt. 3, Conyers, Ph. 483-8001.

Buckeyes for sale, both large

and small orders. Mrs, J.
Phillips, RFD 1, Box 130,
Wrightsville.

One 21 qt. Maid of Honor
pressure canner, used 3 times,
good as new, cheap. Mrs.
Henry Atkinson, 402 Madison
Ave., Ashburn, Ph, 567-2029.

Have space to board several
horses. A. . Elury, 1055
Heards Ferry Road,



N. W.,
D.| Atlanta, Ph, BL. 5-8185, (af-

ter 6 p. m. weekdays, or all
day Saturday and Sunday).



Yellow Root freshly dug
and washed, 4 lb. lardbox full,
85c, nice fresh dried cowhorn
pepper for home use only, 1
doz., pods, 20c or 7 doz., $1.;
Queen of Meadow, 4 lb. lard-
box full, 90c. Add postage.
Mrs. Martha Walker, Rt. 5,
Box 53, Ellijay.

Hydraulic ram, small size,
and 9 in. hammermill for sale.
W. J. McDougald, Suches.

Wild Cucumber Bark, Yel-
low root, rattle root, Queen
of Meadow, Ratbane, Wild
Cherry Bark, $1. for 2 lb.
lardbox full, each kind. Add
postage. G. T. Brown, Rt. 1,
Ball Ground. :

Nice garden sage, 1962 crop,
2 lbs, $3. plus postage and st-
amped envelope; also, Martin
Dipper and Birdhouse gourd
seed, 2 doz. seed, 25c plus st-
amped env. No orders filled
unless stamped envelope en-
closed. Will sell gourds 25c ea.
my place 4 miles S. W. of
Martin. Can not ship gourds,
Mrs. Alta Wood, Rt. 2, Martin.

1962 crop shelled Spanish
peanuts for eating purposes
only. $3.50 gal. p. p. in Geor-
gia. Add 25c extra for outside
of state. Mrs. W. L. Helms,
Buena Vista.

No, 32 Enterprise meat gr-
inder with extra knives, good
cond., $20.; 2 gal. lard press
with sausage stuffer attached,
$15.; 80 gal. iron kettle, $40.;
tricycle grinding stone, $12.50
at farm. F . Newsome,
Gordans Mill Road, Sanders-
ville, Ph. 3856 (not collect).

Miley Styleliner horse tr-
ailer with dressing room, hy-
draulic brakes, turn signals,
guaranteed like new, $1,800.
Thomas J. Howard, M. D.,
505-8. SFC Bldg., Augusta,
Ph. PA. 4-6037. :

Hot red pepper, bright
sound peds for home use, 25c
doz.; 5 doz. $1., add postage.
Miss Marie Mathis, Rt. 5, Box
59, Ellijay.

2,000 6-% ft., red cedar
fence posts, 35 ea.; 60, 12 ft.
cedar poles, 3-% to 4-% in.
dia., small end, $1.50 ea.; 60,
10 ft., cedar poles, 4 to 5-%%
in. dia., small end, $1.25 ea.
F. O. B. my place. Tom Sor-
row, Rt. 1, Carlton, (5 mi.
South Carlton on Lexington
Hwy.). . :

Sassafras, yellow root, wild
cherry tree bark, ratsbane,
seven bark and queen of mea-
dow, each 4 lb. lardbox full,

















$1. plus 35 postage. Mrs.
Wayne Aldon Long, Rt. 5,
Ellijay.



25 lb. pure hog lard, $3.50
at my farm. Mrs. Kate Har-
ae Fayetteville, Ph. HO. 1-

One horse trailer, tandem
wheels, ramp loading, saddle
compartment, cheap but reli-
able. Ruth Bailey, Rt. 1,
Lithonia, Ph, 483-8185 (Con-
yers).

Unwashed white feed bags,
free of holes or mildew, $2.60
doz. p. p. Mrs. Evelyn Panter,
Margret.

Nice, clean shade dried leaf
sage, 2 gts., $1. Add postage.
Mrs. Bryan Gramling, Rt. 5,
Canton.

Good middling meat, 30 to
40 lbs, corn fed hogs, 40c lb;
also, nice fresh lard, 25 lb.
can, $4. at my place on Mt.
Calvary Rd. G. L. Bramlett,
Rt. 4, Marietta, Ph. 428-8947.





15 gal. iron wash pot, $18.
Mrs. Florine G. Thompson,
Fairmount,

Farm bell in good cond. and
blacksmith shop anvil for
sale, Humphrey Wright, 3312
Gilbert Rd., Atlanta 15, Ph.
PO, 1-7127 (after 6 p. m.).

-65 white sacks (chicken
feed), 100 Ib. cap., no letters,
nice smooth cloth, 25c ea. plus
postage; also, Indian corn,
nice size ears, several col.
grains, 10c ea., plus postage.
Prompt shipment. Will send
Cc. O. D. Mrs. Mae Wagoner,
Rt. 2, Blairsville.

Lg. wash pot, $8.; painted
metal plow, $8.; 2 horse wag-
on whls., $5. ea.; buggy wh-
eel, $8. Robert lLaramore,
1852 W. Vista Ave., College
Park, Ph. PO. 7-5455.

Shelled pecan meats, 1962
crop, $1. Ib. L. W. Cook, Rey-
nolds.

1962 black walnuts, hulled,
$2. bu. Will ship collect. Send
money order. Frank S. Br-
ooks, Rt. 3, Lafayette.

Used deep or shallow well
pump for sale. Thomas F.
ay a Greenville, Ph. 672-

Still have sev. acres pasture
available for dry dairy cattle
or beef cattle, $2.50 per head
per mo. You keep up fences.
Farm at Madras, 6 miles N.
Newnan. R. B. Bowen, 316
Peters St., S. W., Atlanta 3,
Ph. MU. 8-1428 (until 5
Dim: :

Well matured Martin gou-
rds, Ig., 50c ea.; medium, 35c
ea.; cut shellacked and ready
to hang, $1. ea.; Martin gourd
seed, lg., pk., 25ce; also, bushel
Gourd seed, 30 seed, $1. Add
postage. Also, 1g. bu. African
gourds, 5 kinds, mixed pk. of
30 seed $1.; small ornamental
gourd seed, 25c pk. Add post-
age. Mrs. W. W. Lowman, Ri.
5, Ellijay.

Martin gourds, lg., 50c ea.;
med. size, 35 ea; yellow
root, sassafras, May apple,
Queen of Meadow, yellow
Dock roots, Wild Cherry bark,
alder bark, Ratsbane, ea.
kind, 4 Ib. lardbox full $1.
plus 35c postage; catnip and
peppermint, 25c bunch; 3, 60c;















Martin gourd seed, 25 pk. |:

and stamped envelope. Mrs.
Freeman Long, Rt. 5, Ellijay.

Nice clean yellow Dock,
Queen of Meadow; Devils
Shoestring, May Apple roots,
4 lb. lardbox full, $1. plus 30c
postage and handling. H. A.
Chastain, Rt. 5, Ellijay.

Old fashion soft green sugar
cane for chewing and syrup,
two cent per stalk at bed here
(Terrell County) A. C. Price,
Bronwood, Ph. 995-2620,

Extra large Martin gourds
raised this. year, $1. ea. post-
age 50c; large medium Martin
gourds, 50c, 35 postage.;
yellow root, 4 Ib. box., $1. 15c
postage. Mrs. Roy T. Pruitt,
15 Border St., Buford.

Padded seat western saddle
full size for sale, reasonably
priced. D. R. Poole, Starlight
Stables, 1135 Niskey Lake
a Atlanta 11, Ph. DI. 4-

Number 3 farm bell with
yoke, $25.; number 2 farm
bell, $20.; number 24 with
side sheel and double yoke,
good clear tone, wt. 250 Ibs.,
$40. W. H. Dickerson, 201
Greene St., Augusta.





30 gallons of pure hog lard
jm glass jars, $1.50 each at my
home. I. H. Stanfield, Old



ks |Natl. Hwy., Rt. 1, Riverdale,




IPh. 964-4262 (not collect).

a

Hot red pepper bright and
sound for home use, 25c doz.,
5 doz. $1., plus postage. Miss
Marie Mathis, Rt. &, Box 59,



Ellijay.



80 eo Posts...

white oak, 4 X 4 X 6 ft., $1.
ea.; Elec. water heater for
dairy or layers, $15.; also, 5
yr. old roan gelding saddle
horse, very gentle with child-
ren, with saddle, $195. Hu-
bert C. Henderson, Rt. 2.
Cumming, Ph. 887-5910.

1962 crop Mountain Wild-
flower honey, thick, raw ex-
actly as the bees made it., 5
lb. tin strained, $1.50; six 5
lb. pails, $8.; 5 lb. tin with
comb, $2.; six 5 lb. pails with
comb, $10.50, add_ postage.
Edward D. Colston, Rt. 1, Box
307, Toccoa.

Country Hickory smoked
meat, Hams size, 10 to 20 lbs.
at 85c Ib.;- shoulders size, 10
to 14 Ibs., at 55 Ib.; sides, 10-
15 lbs., 50c JIb.; smoke sau-
sage, 60c lb. and fresh crack-
lins 39c lb. All meat guar.
against spoilage. Will ship.
Mrs. Louise T. Pope, Box 5,
Dexter. .

One in. Sq. by 54 in., tob-
acco sticks, $30. per thousand
on my yard, $35. per thousand
delivered. Minimum delivery
3500. R. L. Fowler, Villa Nova
St., Cuthbert, Ph. RE. 2-2060
(not collect).

Locust posts, 6% ft. long,
will del. in truck load_ lots.
Bobby Brookshire, 121 Syea-
more Dr., Decatur, Ph, 378-
7667, (after 6 p. m. week
days).

Good yellow locust posts,
6% ft. here, sev. thousand on
paved road, Hwy. 60. H. B.
Brookshire, Suches.

Y% acre or more bamboo
canes, one in. to 4 in. in dia-
meter, some over 50 ft. tall,
sell right from my place, no
del. William G. Ison, Brooks.

Split post oak posts, 6% ft.
long, 300-400. Jimmy Walton,
Rt. 2, Fort Valley, Ph. TA.
5-5851 (no collect calls).

Jerusalem Artichokes, the
proper size for pickling, 15c
Ib. in 5 Ib. lots or more. F.
B. here. (for home use). Carl
C. Hearn, 324 Signal Dr.,
Rossville.

Nice clean dry leaf sage,
$1. 6 teacups full, or 14
cups, $2., plus 24 postage.
Wild Cucumber Bark, Rattle
Root, Ratsbane, yellow root,
May Apple, Button Snake
Root, ea. $1. for 2 Ib. lard box,
add 25 on ea. box full for
postage. P. B. Brown, Rt. 1,
Ball Ground.

Hickory smoked meat for
sale, Hams (10-14 lbs.) 75c
Tb., sausage, 60c, bacon 50c.
Allow 10c per lb. for postage.
Jim Hopkins, Rt. 2, Clayton,
Tate City Community.

100 pet. pure dried ground
red hot pepper, 1 oz., 35c; 3
ozs., $1.: 1 Ib., $4.; 5 Ibs., $20.;
10 lbs., $35. All p. p. L. Doug-
las Griffith, Rt. 1, Dallas. .

liiscellaneous

WANTED





















Want to buy several hund-
red stalks of seed cane and 10
lbs. Stone Mountain water-
melon seed or Black Diamond
melon seed. T. L. Powell, Rt.
1, Box 90, Lake Park.

Want to buy rhubarb roots
(or plants). Quote price and
location. Mrs. Luella J. Curtis,
vee Berne St., S. E., Atlanta

6.

Will clean hen houses for
manure within 35 mi. radius
of Atlanta. W. J. Bales, 114
East Lake Dr., Doraville.

Want 5 to 7 tons good Co-
astal Bermuda hay del. to my
barn at Clermont, Ga. Quote
price and delivery date. Frank
DeLong Jr., 757 Beverly Dr.,
Gainesville, Ph. LE. 4-5301
daytime (call collect).

Want walnuts, pecans and
peanuts in Alpharetta vicin-
ity. State best price. Mrs.
D. Dodd, Rt. 1, Box 223, Alp-
haretta.

Want tablespoonful of Hea-
ding Collard seed (not Geor-











gia Collards). Mrs. Addie
Mauldin, 1835 Polk Street,
Marietta.



Want 25 to 30 good fence
posts at least 8 ft. long, in
Cobb County. State kind and
price in letter or call. J. K.
Staleup, 1557 Sandtown Rd.,



Marietta. ;

s. of duck fea~

thers. Mrs. Nellie S. Watson,
Rt. 9, Box 93, Gainesville.







Want to buy 600 staiks of
sugar cane 300 C. P. 29/116
and 300 C. P. 31/511: and 100
bu. ear corn at $140. F. O. B.
Abbeville T. F. Sapp. Abbe=
ville, Ph. 467-4536 (office).

Want blacksmith anvil and
vice, blower, etc. H. C. May,
2727 Lakewocd Dr.,. Augusta.

Want Flint blackberry pl-
ants. Write price and state if
true to name. Mrs. Sue B.
Dunean, Box 3506, Augusta.

Want some hollow trees or
limbs with 3 in. to 7 in. dia-
meter, Hollow cut, in 12 in,
lengths. J. E. Wood, 471 Hia-







wassee Dr., S. W., Atlanta dle

Want 5 bu. Whipperwill
Crowder peas. State price.
George A. Lord, 1775 S. Can-
dler Rd., Decatur.

Want 3 to 5 tons of good
hay delivered to my barn af-
ter Feb. 15, 1963. Advise what
you have. Fred J. Wilson,
3704 Boring Rd., Decatur. Ph.
BU. 9-4004 (after 6 p. m.).

Want old time cider mill or

press in usable cond. Write



Thomas J. Hicks, McCays-
ville, Ph. 62. : :
Want 5 tons good hay,

cured right, without rain, and
300 bu. ear corn for feed,
F.. O. B. or delivered. State
best price first letter. L. F,



Caniell, 137 Daniell Dr.,
Smyrna.
Want Rhubarb plants or

roots. C. B, Bissell., 250 Best
Dr., Athens.

Want one Syllabub churn.
State cond. and price. Carol-
ine Ashley, Greensboro.

Want one cured, short fur
sheep hide (not green one).
State size, cond. and price. A.
W. Hudgins, 742 Concord Rd.,
Smyrna.

Want approx. 200 bu. of







.|feed oats in reasonable dist-

ance and at reasonable price.

Melvin Peavy. Cuthbert, Ph, |

732-2538.

Want some Green Glazed
7 |Collard seed. Write price in

first letter by the pound. Mrs.
S. L. Delk, Rt. 2, Axson.

Want for seed: about 500
stalks



stalks of Old Fashion Red
Ribbon Sugar Cane, within
radius of 100 miles. Will pick
up at farm. C. M. Leggitt, Sr.,
P. O. Box 95, Unadilla. .

Want to exchange sage pl-
ants; honeybees, beekeeping=
rebing and supering equip.,
bee books and magazines, and
other farm books, all in good
cond., for calves, cows, or ot-
her items. Describe what you
have to trade and send 5c st-
amp for reply. Permit 432, L.
Douglas Griffith, Rt. 1, Dallas.

Want following plants:
sage, Rhubarb, Asparagus,
Horseradish, Scuppernong



grape and herbs; also Hem-

lock, Mtn. Laural, Rhododen-

dron, Golden Belle, Lilacs,
Spruce, Woodbine (red)
Deutzia, crepe myrtle (col-

ors). State size, age and price
each, or in dozen lots. Rush,
Henry C. Evans, Canton.

Want to buy good English
saddle or English bridle; also,
want jog cart at reasonable
price. D. R. Poole, c/o Star-
light Stables, 1135 Niskey
Lake Rd., Atlanta 11, Ph. DI.
4-1508.

Handicrafts

FOR SALE







New handmade dbl. bed
size quilts, good solid and
print cotton materials, cotton
padding, Basket design with
appliqued handle, and Three
Cheer, pieced by pattern;
Rose design, Tulip design and

Z,.| Dutch Doll, all appliqued, $12.

ea. Add postage. Miss Mabel
Mathis, Rt. 5, Box ,57, Ellijay.

Will do quilting or quilt
piecing, crocheting, embroid=
ery or appliqued work in my
home at reasonable prices.
Mrs. Sarah R. Conner, 1020
Moreland Ave., Atlanta 16,
(on Hwy. 41, So.
town Atlanta), Ph. 622-9894.

Nice quilts for sale; also,
pieced tops. Maud B. Smith,
2115 Bayvale Rd., Augusta.





of Old Fashion Red
Sugar Cane and about 500



of down


















PAGE EIGHT |

2 ASC Sets Loan Rate

(Continued From Page 1)

ing quotas are in effect or have not been

disapproved by growers.
lanier explained that the support
level represents an increase of about 1
percentover the 1962 level, due to the
increase in the cost of things which farm-
ers bought during the past 3 years (1960-
- 62) as compared with the 1959 cost, as
provided by law. These costs are measur-
ed by changes in the index of prices paid,
including interest, taxes, and farm wage
rates.
In making the tobacco loan rate an-
-nouncement, the Director pointed out
that all decisions have not been reached
in regard to quality factors which would
_ affect actual support levels for individ-
ual grades. The National Tobacco Advi-
sory Committee made recommendations
to the Secretary of Agriculture for ac-
tions to improve the acceptability of to-
bacco to both domestic and foreign buy-
ers. In accordance with those reeommen-
dations, the Department has discounted
flue-cured varieties Coker 316 and Reams
64 for 1963; has a committee working on
revision of grade standards and proced-
ures; and has recently held five public
hearings on quality factors involved in
flue-cured and burley tobacco.
Decisions on the revision of grade
standards and procedures and other mea-
. Sures to improve tobacco quality are ex-
- pected to be announced at an early date.
Meanwhile, growers are cautioned to do
everything within their power to pro-
duce tobaccos that will be acceptable in





Features Support Payments

Growers who take part in the 1963
feed grain program will receive a price-
support payment in addition to the diver-
sion payment, according to William L.
Lanier, State Executive Director, Geor-
gia Agricultural Stabilization and Con-
servation Service State Office. Such
growers will also qualify for regular
price-support loans or purchase agree-
ments on their 1963 corn, grain sorghum,
and barley crops.

The price-support payment,
explains, is a new feature of the feed

grain program for 1963. (A similar pay-

ment is also available under the 1963
wheat stabilization program.) It is a pay-
ment which will be made on the esta-
blished normal production of the acre-
age planted to the three feed grains in
1963. The same rates will apply through-
out the country; they will. not vary by
counties as the regular loan rates do.

Rates for the price-support payments
have been established at 18 cents per
bushel for corn, 16 cents per bushel (29
cents per hundredweight) for grain sor-
ghum, and 14 cents per bushel for barley.
For each farm, the farm _ bases for all
three grains will be combined into one
feed grain base. And the rate used in de-
termining the price-support payment
like the diversion payment rate for a

Lanier

ticipants on the farms entire 1963






















ogram

particular farm will depend on the
of feed grain taken out of production

Lanier pointed out that the price
port payment really serves as inco
surance; it will be made to growers
divert at least the minimum 20 per
of the farms feed grain base into a
servation use. Even if the planted
is destroyed by natural. conditions
even if part of the feed grain is fed t
animals on the farm, the price-sup:
payment will be made just the sam

Unlike last years feed grain pro
the regular loan or purchase agreer
will be available to 1963 program

duction of corn, grain sorghum, and
leyit will not be restricted to the
mal production of the feed grain acre

The signup under the 1963 feed
program is now under way in A
County Office(s). Lanier urges gro
not to wait until the last few days of
signup period to file applications to
ticipate. The signup ends March 22.



USE OF PESTICIDES

The correct use of pesticides is im
tant, the Cooperative Extension Ser
points out. You should follow the rec
mended directions for these proced
have proved to be safe. Methods in us
day are the result of research done
many scientists.







domestic and world markets.





~ Handicrafts

FOR SALE



Crochet scarves, 12 in. dia-
meter, white mercerized
thread, 50c ea.; 1, 14 in., and
2, 12 in., 3 pe. sets, $1.50 set;
decorative pot holders, 3 for
$1. Mrs. W. E. Wooten, Rt. 2,

Box 150, Camilla. :



White cro. bootees trimmed
in pink, blue and yellow, 75c
pr.; also, bibs to match, both,
$1.; white cro. lace for pil-
lowcases, $1. pr.; crocheted
potholders, $1. ea. Add post-
age. Mrs. H. H. Robinson, Rt.
1, Monroe. ;



Nice aprons of best mater-
tals, solid colors, prints,
checks, all trimmed with
ruffles, rick rack, very pretty,

_ Ige, $1.; med. 75c; small tea
apron, 50c; old fashioned
bonnets, any color, $1. Add
postage on all orders. Mrs. C.
F.. Humphreys, 125 No. Ave.
(Garage Apt.) Gainesville.



x Dbl. bed size quilt tops in
*~ %2 X 90 in. size, some larger,
all new cotton material, hand
sewn: Grandmothers Flower

Garden, $7.; Step Around
Mountain, $5.; Lazyboy,
$3.50; Churn Dash, $3.50;

single bed size Lazyboy, $3.
Mrs. J. D. Ellis, Rt. 5, Ellijay.

Dbl. bed size quilt tops:
Love Knot; Star and other
designs, $2. ea,; Flower Gar-
den; Wedding Ring; Rattle
Snake, $5. ea. Add postage.
ae Mittie Roper, Rt. 1, Can-





Dbl. bed size quilt tops:
Gents Bow; Endless Stairs
and Piano Keys designs, $2.
a.; Eastern Star; Postage St-
amp designs, $3. ea. All new,
_ good material, machine sewn.
Add age, and no checks.
2 a . G. Austin, Rt. 1, Fel-

Tes





Lovely Red Heart Valentine
eprons of organdy and white
lace, $1.50 ea.; Child size, $1.
ea.; fancy organdy and lace
aprons, $1.50 ea.; pretty cot-
ton aprons, 75c ea.; 6, $4.;
work aprons, $1. ea.; pot
holders, 15 ea., 10 for $1.;
-full cut _ childrens dresses,
Nice styles and materials,
$2.25 ea., 1-6 yrs size. Mrs.
W. W. Lowman, Rt, 3, Ellijay.

5 new dbl. bed size appli-
qued quilt tops on white mus-
lin: One Turkey and Pumpkin
designs; 2 Pine Trees with
emb. Snowballs on green; 2

Fans, asstd. cols. $6.50 ea. p.
p. Mrs. Troy Staten, Box 65,
Chatsworth Rd., Dalton.



Lge. dbl. bed size afghans:
brown, yellow, gold and beige
combination; other multi-
color with black trim. Real
nice, well made, and reason-
ably priced. Mrs. Flossie Ro-
berts, 305 Logan St. S. W.,
Atlanta 12, Ph. JA. 4-1269.



Wool quilt top, (one) ap-
Prox. = 72 84 in., pieced
Crazy Quilt style in 12 in.
Squares, all seams briarstitch-
ed; and one dark solid color
dacron top pieced in about 3
in. strips and briarstiteched in
brick style with bright color-
ed thread. $10. ea. Add post-
age. Miss Eula Cox, Rt. 2,
Cave Springs.



Cro. baby slippers, rayon,
button. and lace trim and ray-
on baby shoes, lace and rib-
bon trim, pastels, $1. pr.: Cro.
baby shoes, cotton, rayon and
ribbon trim, wht. with pastel
trim, $1. pr.; cro. baby sets
(cap, sweater and shoes) ny-
lon, pastels, $3.50 set, pastel
colors and pink, blue, white

ton, Rt. 1, Fairmount, Ph. MA.
9-5593 (Calhoun).

10 dbl. bed size quilt tops,
appliqued turtle, 4 leaf clover
and star on black muslin and
stripped in solid color, $7.50
ea.; hot pads, green and blue
or mixed colors, 25c or 2 for
40c; potholders, 10c or 3 for
25c; hankies, trimmed with
tatting, cotton 75c ea.: linen
$1.50 ea.; tatting, Hen and
Biddies, dbl. 75 yd.; single,
35 yd.; 1-% in. $1.50; 5 yds.
$6.; new print aprons trim-
med in solid cols, 75c; Cro.
doilies, small 9 in. 40c; 18 in.
75e; send postage. Mrs. Vir-
ginia Belcher, Rt. 3, Bowdon,
Ph. 3551 (not collect).





Heavy cotton padded quilt
box designs, in pretty colors,
dbl. bed size, $6.; and $1.20
postage. Tops $2., 60c postage:
nice ruffled organdy and
print aprons, good size, $1. ea.



Mrs. Roy T. Pruitt, 15 Border
St., Buford, :

and yellow. Mrs. Sonny Dut-.

Childrens dresses, nicely
made, 1-6 yr. size, $2.
full-size cotton ruffle bedsp-

reads, asstd. cols, $5.50 ea.;

aprons, 75c ea.; 6 for $4.;
novelty potholders, 20c ea.; 7,
$1.; dishtowels, appliz. or

emb., 25 ea.; 5, $1.; dbl. bed
size quilt tops, pieced by pat-
tern, $3. ea. Add postage. Mrs.
Freeman Long, Rt. 5, Ellijay.

Nice hand-painted pillow-
cases, permanently washable,
bleached muslin, pastel colors,
$3. set; scarves to match, $2.
ea. in following designs: Pea-
fowls; Baskets: Forget-Me-
Nots; Ribbon and Roses; Mr.
and Mrs; Floral Sprays; Hea-
rts and Roses, etc. Mrs. L. W.
Welch, Rt. 5, Ellijay.

Pot holders, $1. doz.; eroc-
het poodle dog bottle covers,
$3.50 each. any colors; -cro.
Cat bottle covers, $2. ea.; ap-
rons made from towels, 75c
ea. Add postage. Mrs. Lucy
Waters, 2201 Bisbee Ave.,
Savannah. >

New handmade dbl. bed
size quilts made of good solid
and print cotton material;
cotton padding; dbl. wedding
Ring; Dredsen Plate; Step
Around the Mountain; Grand-
mothers Flower Garden; Bas-
ket Design with appliqued
handles; Grandmothers Fan.
All $12, ea. Add postage. Mrs.
Dewey Ellis, Rt. 5, Box 58,
Ellijay.

Soft, washable, genuine
lambskin baby moccasins, in
pink, blue or white, all hand-
laced and emb. in white. $1.1C
pr., or 3 pr. for $3. p. p. each
mailed in gift box. Mrs. Edgar
Watkins, Rt. 3, New Echota,
Calhoun.

Aprons with bibs, nicely
trimmed, $1. ea.; potholders,
15e ea., or 10 for $1.; emb.
dish towels, 3, $1.; Add post-
age. H. A, Chastain, Rt. 5,
Ellijay.













Broadcloth pillowcases,
emb. crochet edges, $1.25 pr.:
sheet, emb,, $1.; aprons, 3
small, $1.; Med. 50e old fas-
hion bonnets, $1.; dish towels,
emb., 7, $1.; apron to match,
50c. Add 40c postage. Mrs.
Nell Bennett, Rt. 2, Box 311,
Frazer Rd., Buford.

Crocheted baby bootees,





white .and colors, $1.25 pr.
Mrs. B. Clower, Rt. 3,
Lawrenceville, pack

ea.;

Quilt tops approx. 72 KX 90
in., all new cotton material,
$2.50 ea. plus postage. Mrs.
a C. Thomas, Rt. 1, Box 103,

Ito. : Reape

Bib aprons, $1. ea., good
size band aprons, $1. ea.; med.
size, 50c; dresser scarves, $1.
ea., and free gift with ea. or-
der. Add postage. Mrs. Maver
-Estep, Auburn Ave., LaGran-
ge.





Double bed size quilt tops,
new materials, nicely pieced,
letter H $3. ea. add postage.
ae H. N. Day, Rt. 4, Moul-
rie,



Print aprons, fancy trim-

holders, asstd. prints, 15 ea.,
2 for 25c; cotton hdkgfs, as-

40c ea.; 3 for $1.; linen, with
cro. lace, 50e ea.; 3 for $1.35;
pillowcases, white on pastel,
ero. lace and emb. design,
$1.85 pr.; without lace, $1.50
pr.; ero. lace for pillowcases,
ete., 1-% in. wide, 35c yd.
Add postage. Mrs. Buford
Henry, Rt. 2, Franklin,



_Gingham aprons in red,
pink, black, blue, brown,
green and lavendar checks,
emb. in criss-cross squares,
stars, diamond, cross-stitch,
design or criss-cross, $2. ea.:
Indian Head aprons, emb., in
red, yellow, pink, blue aqua,
lilac, gray, green and white
with red bands, sash. $2.50 ea.
Add postage. Mrs. Willie Lee
Porterfield, Rt. 2, Comer.

Cro. shell stitch baby swea-
ter, caps and bootees set, in
baby nylon, pastel colors,
pink, blue, yellow, green and
white, $5. set; or cap and
sweater, $4.40; bootees 60c.
pr. State second choice color.
Send M. O. or will send C. O.
D, All orders p. p. Mrs. Robert
T. Jones, Rt. 4, Box 14, BI-
airsville. Ph. 745-4968.





Strip quilt tops, well made
new print dbl. bed size, - $3.
ea., p. p. Mrs. George Nunn,
Rt. 2, Box 55, Crawfordville.

10 Dbl. bed size quilt tops
made of new scraps: 2 ea. of
following designs: Non Such;
Indian Hatchet; Gents Bow
Tie; Lazy Gal; Non Such for
twin beds, price ea., $2.50.





Send M. O. Mrs, C. C. Davis,
Rt. 1, Empire, lai tule

med, 50c ea.; 3 for $1.35; Pot- |.

std. cols. with Cro. lace edges, |

~ SALES
EVENTS

FEBRUARY 14-15, 19
Dublin Southeas
Poland China Type
ferenceShow and Sal
Laurens County Agr
ture Center, Dublin1
A.M. on Feb. 141:00
Feb. 15. - i 1
states: 30 bred gilts
open gilts, 26 fall b
Lunch served both days
Center. For catalog
Ralph Abney, Gen. Ch
Rt. 1, Cochran. 3









FEBRUARY 20, 1963 We
nesday Macon Geo:
Hereford Associa
Hi-Q Show and Sali
Fair Grounds Show 9
A.M. Sale 1:00 P.M.
Hereford bulls 38 H
ford females. For cata
and information: Carl Coo
ing, Fieldman, Ga. Her
ford Assn., P.O. Box 129
Albany. Se

FEBRUARY 22, 1963B:
bridge1 P.M.Regist
Angus Cattle SaleDeca
County Livestock Audito
ium TRI-STATE ANGI
ASSOCIATION 20 bul
40 females including
with calves, bred cows
open heifers. For inform
tion contact Robert Pucke
Box 307, Blakely.

FEBRUARY 25, 1963Tiftoi
Georgia Angus Asso
tion All Star Show an
Sale Livestock Pavilion
Coastal Plains Experime
Stationselling 5 bulls, 4
open and = bred heifers.
Show 9:30 A.M. Sale 1
P.M. For further infor
tion Contact Carl O. Par
3858 Mathis St., Macon.

MARCH 8 12:30 P
Southeastern Shortho-:
Breeders Assn. Show a
Sale at Tri-County Live
Cir the aii) oe Ci
(a e Hub)Approx.
bulls and about =o f