Newspaper Page Text
Ship Your -
Peaches, Cantaloupes, and Asparagus A i
TO:
LORD & SPENCER, Inc.
21 No. Side F. 11. Market Established 1887 BOSTON MASS.
Incorporated 1917 ,
j
OLD TIME COW PEAS ARE
IN GREAT DEMAND NOW
-
Atlanta, June 9—Old time cow peas
are in great demand and the market
price is now being quoted at $4.F9
Georgia Commission Merchants
for -
GEORGIA PEACH GROWERS
GREEN & MILAM
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
A long established reputation as the
Biggest and Best in the South
WE SOLICIT QUALITY fruit
ON CONSIGNMENT
CRATE TO CARLOAD LOTS
<
Now In Effect.
1 .
Sweet Milk in pint bottle* ...................... ____ 10c each
Sweet Milk in quart bottle* ................—...... _____ 15c each
Buttermilk ............................................ ..... 5c quart
Butter at market price.
Cream...........................-..................-.......— .... 40c pint
Term*: Ca»h in advance or *trictly weekly.
W. J. Braswell’s Sanitary Dairy •
Dairy Phone 3303 Fort Valley, Ga. Res. Phone 131
*
IN PITTSBURGH. PA
ANDERSON & JOHNSTON
ARE ESTABLISHED TO HANDLE
GEORGIA PEACHES
ON A LARGE SCALE WITH ALL
AVAILABLE PROFIT TO
THE GROWER
A Good Substantial House in a Good
Substantial Market
CURTI c o .
Established 18 26
MERCHANTS We solicit ■’ f
COMMISSION Boston Peach your and
Reference: any PRODUCE ♦
Mercantile Agency. FRUIT AND Melon shipments.
104-106 Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON , MASS.
yr
a bushel, according to officials
the Georgia Department of
ture.
“A pea crop is one of the
and most profitable that can
grown,” said an official of the
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., THURSDAY .JUNE 11, 1925.
Death of Mrs. M. G. Grant
In the early morning hours of
May 12, 1925, the spirit of our be¬
loved aunt, Mrs. M. J. Grant, left
its earthly abode for that home
eternal in the heavens. Through
hours of intense suffering, she was
ever patient, having an abiding faith
in Him who doeth all things well.
Aunt Maggie, as she was better'
known, was 77 years of age and was j
a woman of a sweet loving Christian
character and loved by everybody
that knew her. She was a firm be
| her liever of in the Christ and had been a mem
| quite number Byron of Baptist church for
j a years,
She is survived by one son, N. S. i
| Coker and several neices and neph¬
ews,
Funeral services were conducted by
Rev. Walter Heard and she was laid
to rest in the Walker cemetery.
A precious one from us has gone,
A voice we loved is stilled;
A place is vacant in our home
Which never can be filled.
God, in His infinite wisdom, has re-!
called
The boon His love had given
And the body moulders here,
The soul is safe in Heaven.
A NIECE, A. W. H.
Byron, Ga., June 9, 1925.
Georgia has the oldest chartered
woman's college in the World; and
first issued a diploma with a degree
to a woman.
i partment. The average soil will pro¬
duce peas in great quantities and
with little cultivation.”
“Every farmer should plant sev¬
eral acres in peas and not only make
enough for home consumption, but a
surplus that can be sold at a profit,”
an official of the department said.
!
• * I PEACHES
| Henderson, Linthicum & Co.
CAMDEN AND CHARLES STREETS — BALTIMORE, MARYLAND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS J*
OVER FORTY YEARS OF SERVICE TO OUR SHIPPERS
USE THE BALTIMORE MARKET
—AND
SEND YOUR SHIPMENTS TO US
COMPETENT SALESMEN PROMPT RETURNS
REFERENCES:
Drovers & Mechanics National Bank of Baltimore The Produce Reporter
I
DuiTs Mercantile Agency Any Railroad Entering Baltimore
CHESTER FRANZELL & CO. 1
Industries PITTSBURGH, PA. Pay rolls heaviest
running in years
full-blast and
... 1-4
WHEELING, Buying power 1
Public employed generally and W. VA. of community
tremendous
prosperous
Heaviest receivers of Peaches on above tivo
markets for many years.
The trade come to ns for Peaches because
they knoiv ive trill have daily supplies from start
of Georgia season until the latest northern grown
crops are marketed.
We maintain a corps of expert salesmen
thoroughly experienced in the handling of
Peaches.
.
AT YOUR SERVICE ft
r
CORRESPOND
WITH US