Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
. AR RRRRRRRRRRT I R~
WANT ADS.
D ——— e e e ———
FOR SALE
Portable & Standard Typewriters
Royal & Remington
L. C. Smith — Underwood
TYPEWRITER SALES SERVIOE
COMPANY
401 Lumpkin St. Phone 1251
YARDLEY
HAND CREAM
On Sale 65¢
(Plus Tax)
Moon-Winn Drug Co.
cc
JELI s LRI g e
)
WHAT WILL YoU
PAY 70 BREAK IN
y |
AHew CAR?
AN,
o Rl I
&-\ 2 rfi'“
THE MAN WHO BUYS A
NEW CAR PAYS 70 BREAK
/7 /N FOR THE NEXT OWNER
‘
SEE OUR OK'D
1942 Ford Club Coupe, like new.
1942 Oldsmobile 78 Sedan Hydro
matic; radio and heater.
1942 Pontiac Convertible Coupe;
radio and heater.
1942 Chevrolet Fleetline 4-door
Sedan; radio and heater.
1942 Chevrolet Special DeLuxe 2-
door Sedan, radio, heater.
1942 Buick Roadmaster Sedan;|
radio and heater.
1941 Pontiac Convertible Coupe.
1941 Ford DeLuxe Tudor Sedan.
1941 Oldsmobile Sedan; radio and
hea:er,
1941 Pontiac Sedan; radio andl
heater.
1941 DeSoto Club Coupe; radio
and heater.
1941 Chrysler 4-door Sedan.
1946 Willys Jeep.
Others in all makes and model.
EASY TERMS.
SOUTHERN MOTOR
COMPANY
194 West Clayton Street
Phone 987 Athens, Ga.
M
M
(N SHORT TIMAE.
four car will leag@ vom
seeded Cash, If you drive fte
our door Use your Car for
driving — and, as an assetl’
Inguire Into our Easy-Bor
row, Fasy-Repay plan. Ne
restrictions on use of yewr
Car!
Auto Finance Co.
Phone 832 £79 E. Broad Si.
AUTOMOBILE - INSURANCE
ALSO — OTHER FORMS OF PROPERIY AND
CASUALTY INSURANCE.
SMITH -BOLEY - BROWN - INC.
shone 9 109 Shackelford Blg
JEFFERSON STANDARD LIFE INSURANCE CO.
5% on Dividends and Séttlement Options
A. P. FARRAR, Dist. Mgr. HERSCHEL KINNEY, Agent
410 Southern Mutual Building Phone 1564
Buy and Sell Your Property
Through
FROST REALTY COMPANY
e NOW e
Phones 2334 - 1425-J.
BUILD YOUR SAVINGS HERE
AND NOW WITH SAFETY
AND PROFIT
Save regularly if you would be free
from petty worries.
Begin so save today.
SAFETY is INSURED
ATHENS
FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN
- ASSOCIATION
Georgia Livestock
Worth $175,864,000
The Crop Reporting Service
said today that livestock in Geor
gia farms at the pegianing of 1047
was valued at $175,864,000, an
’increase of 14 percent over the
value at the beginning of 1946.
The number of chickens de
creased nine percent during the
year, work stock three percent
and milk cows one percent, Tur
keys increased 25 percent, hogs
12 percent and cattle one percent.
I ONE-VARIETY COTTON
’ Planting seeq for one-variety
cotton communities can be ob
tained at more reasonable price
now than during the planting
seasop, accordihg to cotton im
provement specialists of the Ex
tension Service.
During World War 11 war death
glaims paid by commercia] U. S.
insurance companies (not in
cluding National Service Life [n
surance) was only 6.2 percent of
tae total for the period.
~ WANT ADs.
.’ EVEN IF . YOUREN, A
! ?—wm |'vy \3
R el
i Vel ‘f‘fi" o
| A ]
| AIM
’ 3 v‘n’-i.~.s" ‘\l
f joall -'\ .
THAT OUR
" DIAHONDS axe [YPERB
CHANDLER
Jewelry Store
VLo,
N
"fi" .-_t’ wfl:fl
e( o
LOCAL AND LONG
DISTANCE MOVING
To the 48 States,
Canada and Mexico.
Dependable Service.
Storage—Packing—Shipping.
ADAMS TRANSFER CO.
Phone 215 or 216
227 OCONEE STREET
M
AUTO - . “
G
2 AN\ W e
E\% )
=V
@) =
WGAU « 1340 %"
Affiliated With the Columbia Broadcasting Syste.n
FRIDAY NIGHT
6:oo—Eric Severeid & News.
6:ls—Sports Parade.
6:3o—Red Barber {CBS).
6:4s—Robert Trout & News
(CBS).
7:oo—Mystery of the Week
(CBS).
7:ls—Jack Smith Show (CBS).
7:3o—Sparkle Time (CBS).
6:oo—The Baby Snooks Show
(CBS). :
8:30-—The Adventures of the
Thin Man (CBS). .
8:55—Bill Henry and News
(CBS).
2:oo—The Ginny Simms Saow
(CBS).
¥:3O-——Durante - Moore Show
(CBS).
10:00—It Pays To Be ignorant
(CBS)
10:30—Maisie, (CBS)
11:00—CBS News.
11:15—Dancing in the Dark
12:00—AP News.
12:10—Sign Off.
SATURDAY MORNING
7:00—Good Morning Circle.
8:00—CBS Morning News
Roundup (CBS).
B:ls—Western Serenader.
B:3o—Radio Revival How
9:OO—CBS Morning News
9;ls—Morning Melodies
§:3o—Majestic Melodies.
10:00—Glory Pleasants. Trio.
10:15—Mid-Morning News.
10:30—Mary Lee Taylor (CBS).
11:00—Warren Sweeny & News.
11:C5—Let’s Pretend (CBS).
11;30—~The Adventurer’'s Club
(CBS)
12:00—Theater of Today (CBS)
ENDURANCE NEARLY GONE,
RETONGA BRINGS RELIEF
Could Eat Only Soft Foods
And Felt Too Weakened
To Walk A Block, Says
Stevens. Regains 25 Lbs.
And Now Feels Fine.
“For a year I ate no solid food
and yet was still tormented by
nervous indigestion and was
down to ninety pounds in weight,
but thanks to Retonga I have re
gained twenty-five pounds, eatl
anything and feel fine,” grate
fully states Mr. John H. Stevens,
of 42 Hoyt Street, N. W.,, Atlanta,
Ga.
“I don’t see how anyone could
have suffered more,” continued
Mr. Stevens. “Even soft foods
seemed to bloat my stomach un
til sometimes it seemed all 1 could
do to breathe. My weight drop
ped to ninety pounds and I could
scarcely walk a block. I felt high
strung, I was unable to get re
APPROVED SERVICE
DOWNS MOTORS, Inc.
234 W. Hancock Avenuc Tel 2736
(RO TA L
s i i TRk
FACTORY ENGINEERED PARTS I
O e e ZZ".:L: ——— ".___ S
HOME TOWN NEWS
YL -
' : ee Ml
V 7 ~ B
| "// Tofomtoran ] o
' 1 EmE
' % B< W 2/ i
! //// \.‘\.' A/ 7[ P /
“I'll be glad when this day is over . . . I want t‘(;.‘sit down in
my big easy chair and enjoy a nutritious dish of ice cream
from the ATHENS COOPERATIVE CREAMERY.”
PR O
TR AT Lo e Y
| ATHENS, GEORGIA
FHE BANNTR-FERALD, ATHENS, @mm
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
12:30—0l1d Country Church,
I:oo—Grand Central Station.
(CBS). -
I:3o—Borden’s County Fair
(CBS)
2:oo—Give And Take (CBS).
2:3o—Georgia Play Boys,
3:OO—AP News.
3:05—1340 Platter Party.
4:oo—Matinee at Meadowbrook.
4:3o—Adventures in Science
(CBS)
4:45—00f Men and Books (CBS)
s:oo—Philadelphia Orchestra
(CBS).
SATURDAY NIGHT
6:oo—Tomorrow’s Sunday
School Lesson.
6:2o—Alabama Jubilee
6:45 CBS News.
7:oo—Teen-Tune Time.
7:3o—~Vaughn Monroe’s Orches
tra (CBS).
8:00—Hollywood Star Time
(CBS).
B:3o—Mayor of the Town
(CBS).
8:55-——Ned Calmer and News
(CBS).
9:oo—~Your Hit Parade (CBS).
' 9:4s—Saturday Night Serenade
(CBS).
'lO:lS—-This is Hollywood (CBS)
10:45—Sports Final.
Ill:OO—-CBS News
11:15—Dancing In The Dark.
| 12:00—AP News. i
| 12:10—Sign Off.
! Mexico City; at the southeast=
iern edge of the Valley of Mexi
| co ig built on the site of Tenoch
'titlun. capital of the ancient Az~
tec Empire. /
freshing sleep, or feel really com
fortable. I had to take a strong
laxative almost, every night and
still seemed full of toxic poison.
Often every muscle seemed to
ache. 1 almost passed the limit
of my endurance. '
“It is almost unbelievable the
relief Retonga gave me. Consti
pation and muscular aches are
relieved and I sleep restfully. I
have regained twenty-five pounds
and eat anything. If anyone had
told me a year ago I could ever
feel as fine as I do now I woul‘d
not have believed it. Retonga 1s
grand medicine.”
Retonga is intended to relieve
distress due to insufficient flow
of digestive juices in the stom
ach, loss of appetite, Vitamin B-1
deficiency and constipation. Ac
cept no substitute. Retonga may
be obtained at Crow’s Drug
Store. (adv.)
‘Shinn Favors New
Bill Governing
‘Admission To Bar
Dr. Henry A. Shinn, acting
dean, University of Georgia
School of Law, went on record
this week as favoring legislation
currently before the Georgia
House of Representatives which
would place in the hands of the
Georgia Supreme Court the pow
er to prescribe the educatiocnal
prerequisites for admission to the
bar.
He joins with Deans Hamilton
Douglas, Atlanta Law School;
Charles J. Hilkey, Emory Uni
versity Law School; and Meade
Field, Mercer University Law
School, in active support of the
change.
“Forty-four states in the Union
have adopted educational re
quirements of two or more years
of liberal arts education for ad
mission to the bar. Three states—
South Carolina, Mississippi and
Louisiana—require a high school
education. Georgia alone has no
educational requirement,” stated
Dr. Shinn.
In addition to the support of
these law deans, the bill has been’
endorsed by the student bodies
of those law schools, as weil as
by many prominent lawyers,
some of whom hold high positions
in the Georgia Bar Association,
the University Dean pointed out.
Enactment Seen
The proposed »ill, known as
“House Bill No. 245, was re
cently favorably returned from
the Judiciary Committee, and has
received its second reading. The
law educators express strong be
lief that the bill will become law
before the adjournment of the
current legislative session. .
The bill as proposed reads:
“Be it enacted by the General
Assembly of the State of Georgia
and it is hereby enacted by au
thority of the same that from
and after the passage of this
Act, the Justices of the Supreme
Court shall be authorized to pre
seribe the educational and other
qualifications of applicants and
to make and adopt rules as to
the making of application to take
examination and as to the time,
manner, and places of (holding
axaminations for admission to
the bar of this State and are
hereby specifically authorized to
provide for the holding of said
examinations under the supervis=-
ion of the Board of Bar Examin~
ers at not more than three cities,
under such rules and regulations
as may be prescribed by them,
and may provide for said exami
nation to be held over such per
iod of days as in their judgment
shall be fair to the applicant for
examination. :
“Be it further enacted by the
authority aforesaid that all laws
and parts of laws in conflict
herewith be and the same are
hereby repealed.” .
Savannah-Columbus,
.
Lanier-Richmond
Highlight G. 1. A. A
ighlight G. 1. A. A.
BY GAYNOR COLLESTER
AUGUSTA, Ga., Feb. 28 —
(AP) — Savannah High, the de
fendings champion, takes on Jor
dan High of Columbus here to
night in the feature battle of tae
GIAA Dbasketball tournament
semi-finals, while Lanier High of
Macon meets Richmond Academy
of Augusta.
The Savannah Blue Jackets
marked up an easy 45 to 18 win
over Catholic High of Augusta in
last nigat's quarter-finals, as La
nier turned on the heat to elim
inate Atlanta’s Tech High, a pre
tournament favorite 61 to 40.
Richmond, which has its good
and bad nights, hit a good one
ang easily defeated Columbus
High 43 to 25. Phil Byrne, Co
lumbus center and second high
scover of the conference, marked
up 17 points to lead in the tally
ing department, while Barry
Blemker, Richmond’s candidate
for All-GIAA Tonors, paced the
winners with 12 points,
In the fourth game of the
night the Jordan team, which
had demonstrated its streng®a in
eliminating Atlanta Boys High
38 to 37, hag to battle all the way
to beat Marist College of Atlanta
88 -
Poets Breeze
The score was evened three
times in the first half before the
Jackets hit their stride and went
ahead. Many of their shots were
from near the center of the floor
because of their inability to pen
etrate the tight zone defense of
Marist.
The surprisingly easy time
whiich the Lanier Poets had in
defeating the powerful Smithies
from Atlanta was a major upset
of the tournament. The Poets
were never in trouble and had a
28 to 13 lead at halftime.
However, Savannah had even
less trouble in eliminating Au
susta’s Catholic High, which
Lasn't won a conference game all
vear. Second and thirq stringers
played most of the game for the
defending champions. Johnny
Rousakis was high scorer for Sa
vannal with 12 points and Jack
Burke leg the Augusta team with
seven.
KITCHEN CONTEST
Twiggs County home demon
stration club members are parti
cipating in the kitchen improve
ment contest as material becomes
available, according to Mrs_ Julia
P. Kitdiens, home demonstration
agent. Some have drawn thelr
own plans an# are completely
modernizing their homes.
Legal Advertisements l
GEORGIA, Clarke County:
To the Superior Court of
Clarke County, Georgia, and to the
Honorable Henry H. West, Judge
of said court: |
The petition of E. T. Blackman,'
Ed Booth, J. F. Bridges, Jr., Wil
bur Bullock, Ed Condron, Garrett
Deas, Vane G. Hawkins, W. S.
Rousey and Steve Turnell respect
fully shows: |
1. That they desire for them
selves, their associates and syc
cessors, to be incorporated under
the name and style of “Classic|
City Post 185, Inc.”
2. Said corporation is not or-l
ganized for pecuniary gain or pro
fit, and shall be without capital!
stock. No part of the net earnings|
of said corporation shall inure to
the benefit of any member of saidl
corporation. i
3. The general object of the
proposed corporation is to hold[
title, for the use and benefit of |
Classic City Post 185, The Ameri
can Legion, and for the use and
benefit of the members of said
post, to realty and personalty de
voted to the use and benefit of
said post and its members. {
4, Said corporation is to have
corporate existence for the full
period of thirty-five years, with
the privilege of renewals as pro
vided by law.
5. The principal office of said
corporation is to be located in
Clarke County, ‘Georgia. {
6. Petitioners desire that they,
and their associates and successors,
have corporate authority to re
ceive donations; to buy, acquire,
hold, improve, manage, rent, sell
and convey realty and personalty;
to borrow money; to otherwise
incur debts; to execute notes or
bonds to evidence debts for money
borrowed or otherwise incurred;
and ‘o secure the payment of any
such debt or debts by mortgage,
security deed, deed of trust, or
other appropriate instrument to
any realty or personalty, or both,
that may be .owned from time to
time by said corporation. - |
7. The members of said cor
poration shall be the petitioners
named hgrein, and such other
members *in good standing of
Classic City Post 185, The Ameri
can Legion, as may be hereafter
admitted to membership in this
corporation in conformity with its
by-laws as amended from time to'
time.
8. The affairs of said corpora
tion shall be managed by a Board
of Directors, to be composed of
not less than three nor more than
nine members of the corporation.
Your petitioners shall constitute
the original Board of Directors
and shall serve until their suc
cessoi's are duly elected and quali- |
fied in conformity with the by~
laws of this corporation. 1
9. At the organization meeting
of members, to be held following
the granting of this charter, any
and all corporate action may be
taken that is within the power of
the corporation.
i 10. The names and post office
addresses of the applicants for
this charter are as follows: 1
E. T. Blackman, Athens, Geor
gia; Ed Booth, Athens, Georgia;
J. F. Bridges, Jr.,, Athens, Geor
gia; Wilbur Bullock, Athens,
Georgia; Ed Condron, Athens,
Georgia; Garrett Deas, Athens,
Georgia; Vane G. Hawkins, Ath
ens, Georgia; W. S. Rousey, Ath
| ens, Georgia; Steve Turnell, Ath
ens, Georgia. . o
l 11. Petitioners desire that said
corporation have all the rights and
i'privileges conferred on corpora
tions of similar nature by that Act
of the General Assembly oi Geor
gia, approved January 28, 1938,
and set forth in the Acts of the
Extraordinary Session of 1937-38,
commencing on page 238, and
commonly known as the Corpora
tion Acts of 1938, and all such
rights, powers and privileges as
may be lawfully enjoyed by
. similar corporations.
Wherefore your petitioners pray
that they be incorporated under
the name above stated, with all of
the rights, powers and privileges
set out above.
Edwin T. Blackman, Ed A.
'Booth, J. ¥. Bridges, Jr., Wilbur
Bullock, Ed. Condron, Garrett
Deas, Vane G. Hawkins, W. S.
Rousey, Steve Turnell.
i In the Superior Court of Clarke
County, Georgia.
| The foregoing petition of E. T.
Blackman, Athens, Georgia; Ed
Booth, Athens, Georgia; J. F.
Bridges, Jr., Athens, Georgia; Wil
bur Bullock, Athens, Georgia; Ed
‘Condron, Athens, Georgia, Gar
rett Deas, Athens, Georgia, Vane
G. Hawkins, Athens, Georgia; W,
S. Rousey, Athens, Georgia; Steve
Turnell, Athens, Georgia, being
presented to and examined by me
as provided by law; and it appear
ing that the application is legiti
mately within the purview and in
| tention of the laws of this state;
and there being presented to me
with said petition a certificate
from the Secretary of State de
!claring that the name of the pro
{ posed corporation is not the name
'of any other existing corporation
registered in the records of the
Secretary of State;
It is hereby ordered that the
said application be and the same
‘is hereby granted: and the said
‘ applicants above named, and their
associates and successors, are
‘hereby incorporated under the
'name of Classic City Post 185, Inc.
for the period of thirty-five years,
with the privilege of renewals as
provided by law; and with all
' rights, powers and privileges set
out in said application for charter,
and with all such other rights,
powers and privileges as are now
or may hereafter be conferred by
law on.similar corporations. :
At Chambers, Athens, Georgia,
this 13th day of February, 1947,
< HENRY H. WEST |
Judge Superior Courts Western
Circuit.
F-14-21-28-M-T.
NOTICE OF BOND ELECTION
Notice is hereby given to the
qualified voters of Clarke County,
Georgia, that on Tuesday, the
25th of March, 1947, an election
will be held at all the voting or
election precincts in said County
to determine the question wheth
er bonds to the amount of $200,-
000.00 shall be issued by said
Couaty of Clarke. The proceeds
of said bonds, if issued, shall be
applied to the constructing and
equipping of an addition to the
Athens General Hospital and re
pairs and improvements to the
present General Hospital build
ing. The said bonds, if issued,
shall be two hundred in number,
each to be of the denomination
of $1,000.00 and to bear interest
at the rate of two percent per
annum from the first day of July,
1947: said interest payable semi
annually on the first day of Jan
uary and the first day of July of
each year. The principal of said
bonds is to be paid as follows:
$4,000.00 of said issue, or four
bonds, is to be paid on the first
day of January, 1948, and a like
amount of said principal or four
bonds is to be paid on the first
day of January of each succeed
ing year up to and including the
first day of January in the year
1962. e
$8,000.00 of said issue, or eight
bonds, is to be paid on the first
day of January in the year 1963;
and a like amount of said prin
cipal, or eight bonds, is to be
paid on the first day of January
in each succeeding year up to
and including the first day of
January in the year 1972.
$12,000.00 of said principal, or
twelve bonds, is to be paid on the
first day of January in the year
1973: and a like amount of said
principal, or twelve bonds, is to
be paid on the first day of Jan~-
nary in each succeeding year up
to and including the first day of
January in the year 1977, so
that all the principal of the en
tire issue of said bonds shall be
paid off and disch@rged within
thirty yvears. The entire amount
of interest on said bonds is to be
paid each year as it accrues on
said issue, or part of said issue
remaining outstanding from year
to year. Said interest to be paid
semi-annually on the first day of
January and the first day of July
‘of each year. The last payment
of interest on the last $12,000.00
of said bonds is to be paid on the
Ist day of January, 1977, so that
all of said bonds, both principal
and interest, shall be paid off
and discharged - within thirty
vears from the date of said issue.
Both principal and interest of
said bonds payable in lawful
money of the TUnited States of
America.
Said election shall be held by
the same persons and 'in the same
manner, under the same rules and
regulations that elections for
County Officers are held, and the
returns shall be made to the
Board of Commissioners of
Roads and Revenue of said Coun
ty, who shall in the presence and
together with the several mana
gers who bring up the returns,
consolidate the returns and de
clare the result.
" The form of Ballot to be used
shall be as follows:
For Hospital Bonds.
Against Hospital Bonds.
The voters shall scratch one
line of said ballot, and the line
left unscratched shall be counted.
By order of the Board of Com
missioners of Roads and Revenue,
Clarke County, Georgia.
This 4th day of February, 1947.
J. H. TOWNS, Chairman.
HARRY H. ELDER.
J. F. HAMMETT.
F 14-21-28, M 7-14.
GEORGIA—Ciarke Couniy:
By virtue of an order of the
Ordinary of said State and Coun
ty, there will be sold at public
outery,’ on the first Tuesday in
March, 1947, at the courthouse
door in Athens, Georgia, between
the legal hours of sale, to the
highest and best bidder for cash,
the following described land in
said County, to-wit: .
All that tract or parcel of lang
with all improvements thereon,
situated, lying and being in the
City of Athens, Clarke County,
Georgia, known as 153 Lyndon
Avenue, described as beginning
at an iron pin on the westerly
side of Lyndon Avenue three
hundred and twenty-four (324)
feet northerly from Prince Ave
nue, and running thence west
erly one hundred and ninety
eight (198) feet to a fence post;
thence northerly sixty-one and
one-Walf (6115) feet to a fence
post; thence easterly one hundred
and ninety-eight (198) feet to a
wooden pin on Lyndon Avenue;
and thence southerly along the
westerly side of Lyndon Avenue
sixty (60) feet to the beginning
point.
This the 6th day of February,
1947. B
RUFUS FRANKLIN, JR,,
As Administrator of the Estate
of Rufus, Franklin, deceased.
MILNER & STEPHENS,
Attorneys, '
Athens, Georgia.
F 7-14-21-28.
GEORGIA—CIarke County:
All creditors of the estate of
James Guy Hancock, late'of Clarke
County, Georgia, deceased, are
here notified to render to me an
account of their demands, and. all
persons indebted-to the estate of
said deceased are requested to
make prompt payment to the un=-
dersigned.
9This the 7th day of February
1947.
MRS. GUY HANCOCK
Executrix, Estate James Guy Han
cock, deceased.
¥-7-14-21-28-M-7-14.
LIBREL FOR DIVORCE
In Clarke Superior Court,
April Term, 1947.
MRS. G. W. MESSER
Plzintiff
-g : :
G. W. MESSER
Defendant
Greetings:
By order of Court you are
hereby required to be and appear
at the next hte:lgx of the Superior
Court to be held in said State
TRIDAY, -FEBRGARY-28- 1044
[and County on the first Monday
in April, next, to answer peti~
tioner’s complaint for a divorce, 3
‘ vinculo matrimonii, and in de~
fault thereof the Court will pro.
| ceed as justice shall appertain.
{ Witness the Honorable Henry
| H. West, Judge of said Court, this
| the 21st day of February, 1947,
| E. J. CRAWFORD, Clerk,
PRESTON M. ALMAND
Petitioner’s Attorney.
'F 21-28, M 7-14,
| GEORGIA—CIarke County:
|ln the Superior Court of saig
j County. Case No. 9897.
iWILLIAM L. RETHMAN, JR.
VS.
{ MRS. ALICE HOWARD
RETHMAN
To Mrs. Alice Howard Rethman,
I the defendant in the above
named and slated case:
By order of the Court you are
hereby required, personally or by
attorney, to be and appear at the
Superior Court of said County on
| the first Monday in April, 1947,
;to answer the pliantiff’s com
| plaint as, in default thereof, the
! Court will proceed as to justice
| shall appertain.
| Witness the Honorable Henry
'H. West, Judge of said Court, this
! the 19th day of February, 1947.
| ELMER J. CRAWFORD, Clerk,
ARTHUR S. OLDHAM,
Attorney for Petitioner.
| F . 21-28, M 7-14.
Crop, Seed Loans
At Athens Office
Annual crop or seed loan ser
vice which farmers formerly re
received at the crop loan office
at Athens, for Clarke County,
and Watkinsville, for Oconee
County, will, be available now at
the office of Farmers Home Ad
ministration in the County Court
Hous, at Athens; also loan appli
cations will be taken at Watkins
ville on Monday and Thursday
afternoons during loan season
at the County Court House. This
announcement was made yester
day by R. B. England County FHA
Supervisor.
The new arrangemecnt is the re«
sult of the merger last November
of the Farm Security Administra
tion and the Emergency Crop
and Feed Loan Agency of the
Farm Credit Administration.
The new agency, set up by ace
tion of the 79th Congress, makes
possible the handling of crop
loans, and various types of super
vised credit formerly furnished
through the FSA, in the one
county office.
Types of supervisel credit in
clude production loans of ong to
five years for the purchase of
work stock, livestock, machinery,
farm and home equipment, and
other operating needs; farm
ownership loans for the purchase
of family-type farm homes amor
tized over a possible 40-year
periocd. They are available only
to borrowers who cannot obtain
credit upon reasonable - terms
from other sources.
Special attention is given to
loans for eligible wveterans, it
was onnounced,
' HOOKWORM CONTROL
A hookworm control program
has been initiated in Appling
County by tae county vrogram
!p]anning committee with district
lpublic health service doctors and
|engineers. Dangers of neglect
and methods to use in trealing
land ridding premises of unsani
itary conditions ave being stress-
Led, according to Mrs. Frank_]in
| Parker, home demonstration
| agent.
(-0-M-I-N-G
~ GEORRIA
PEACH PICKERS
' Grand Ole Opry
ROY ACUFF
SHORTY GREEN
Mell Auditorium
Pl
R