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PINK PARFAIT— GRANDIFLORA
Pink Parfait, third Rra; 'vnca Rose Selec
tion honors since 1938, i » Keeners for
fall planting. Highlight* li ”f P*^ p “ te *
shades, the semi-double I 11 l-- I *^ to deep
rose. (
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FPANKLIJ D. ROOS ,E WHITE
IV T r, WAR , GA.
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CNDERWRAPS . . . World
heavyweight champicn Tngc
■tar Johannsen wraps protec
tive bandages around His
hand j before a workout at
Grt&singer, N, Y "e hr 1 a
Mmatch with ex-ch. ; ;p Floyd
. f»tiersun on June 20th.
Y That
' listicians, who
on everything,
.' checking back
,ist how sched-
Ray Robinson
trig his career,
low up in Bal
. .-rounder with
. marked one of
Robinson has
to meet a coni
long ca^er,
. .e probably
s when his op
•.e had tailed to
m . . . TeeVee
a ' Rose Bowl
more years,
a contract be
-1 1 roadcasting
nament of
• Association
iversities . . .
■tors traded
iromonte to
.fielder Pete
artels Uuiver
c'tercollegiate
rilio. released
Dodgers after
it believe he is
r leaguer. He
-ce to play for
a J' ab a* his rcgol*'
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i FARM CHATS
by M. K. JACKSON
OUR GREATEST RESOURCE
Youth of Georgia are tb e Mate's ;
greatest resourced The .future qf '
Georgia and the nation is depend^ l
ent on the kinds and amounts of
ducational o, portunities offered
to our boys and girls,
With the great technological
advances made in recent years
^nd those to corps ^future years,
high quality ddficatjoft’Will be
ome increasingly important to
our civilization, The four-year
. ollege degree is already standard
equipment for many of the desir
..ble jobs in Georgia. Jobs are
..squiring workers who are more
killed, more specialized, and bet
ter educated than ever before.
How will the youth in Georgia
ue in the competition for these
tt?r jobs. The University sys- i
m in Gw.'ia has developed;
any leaders in science, industry, .
internment, and other areas.,
jthcr slate.; have done the.same, ;
nd in the future many of them
apparently expect to do more.
What will Georgia be able to do?
Xvcragh per' capita income
-nt on higher education in
■ orgia is less'th’hn the average
or the nation and less than the
erag for the South.
Average faculty salaries are
also less than fpr the nation and
’ South.
With the coming population ex
-I'osion, many more Georgia
youth will be wanting an oppor
tunity for higher education. Will
G orgia’s University System be
able to provide this’opportunity?
It not, what will be the economic
figure of I : yFun* men ;nd
A CIENT LOG'FOUND
A log snvbh fret In diameter
vas found in a dry tunnel 150
fe t below the bed of the Yakima
River in Washington, according
to the Forest Products Laboratory
of the U. S. Forest Servick The
wood was identified as an extinct
species of sequoia, and its ag<
was estimated by geplogists at 12
million years.
In 1935-39 consumers spent 23
r r cent of their.income for foot’,
in 1959 it took only 21 per cent off
their income.
When oats are for grazing only,
apply all of nitrogen at planting I
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th/iw?™^ the , basic ‘•••arncter of the Thunderbird,
IU«1 models shown above introduce all-new styling i»
proved performance, and new standards of cohort and’cm>?
n^’ Thunderbird r F I " U ! H ’ crb t i,d ^‘“ins «» ‘he features that
~ - lhu,, ® epblrd ~-‘he classic roofline, four-passenger luxury
the fatuous console ami rich inters rs. Although neither us
wide nor as long a? tin- previous m< del, the new Thunderbird
Mn i^in th r<,,, "‘ aH ,U ‘”" nd wd "» to eight inches more
eoll^ , f*' ^""'K “ rc “-. An optional movable steering
i^h^for dT s<eet.ng wheel to glide ten inches to the
t^.‘T’’ w ht ami out. Other comfort im-
provements include elimination of the “dog-leg.” wider door
l^nddnle^ n f 12 P 1 < ’ I, '“h '“ < te fcnnl innl’linK in the seats.
, P ’ nt n< . "'’’““‘ "v ~' , !’ , ' r :, "R<' automatic transmission,
autoniii' u' " ! • ' .«'wer ral.es tlr.t ad ’u t themselves
engiiie <U U> ’ “"“ “ "‘ * T!! "“ (,e >bird 3l»0 four - barrel V-S
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represented’by^hrfit’of^vidim ^J :trag ^ acddent «
, New York sidewalk, Ml?^ P lowed “to z
! women,
U Without an increase in college
graduates, Georgia’s recent indus
। trial and agricultural gains will
i be blunted and the per capita in
• -ome will drop. History has
; ;hown that education precedes
i.economic growth and that the
stronger your educational system,
the higher your uper capita in
' come.
* * . *
EGG I.VDUSTRY
Th;- fastest growing agricultu
ral business in Georgia today is
the commercial egg industry.
Tar-e years ago Georgia was
efficient in egg supplies and de
pended on the midwest for a
large percentage of its egg sup
... r;cv/. i..v .-■■’l.' - noi only
.xL’-sufficient in eggs but in ex-
I porting eggs to other states.
; One of the big factors in this
fast growth of the egg industry
mark ting efficiency. Quality
I ntrol programs have been de
, y ..loped by most firms and poul
। rymen.
Refrigeration is now considered
1 basic requirement in’a poultry
',' t rprise because it is a key
factor in quality control. Oiling
the egg shell to help in maintain.
iing cu il'! ! - al o practiced by
i many poultrymen.
conn wrt _ b/\D DIRT
Good dirt makes the fertile fields
That produce abundant yields
Os crops that feed and. clothe
mankind;
Too much good dirt one cannot
find.
Bad dirt truly is a curse,
It soils the soul and makes man
worse
an he was the day before;
mil dirt all people should
deplore.'
No dirt in heart, good dirt in
land,
For such there always is demand;
Give us good dirt to grow our
Give us clean hearts to make us
food,
good.
—J. Seaborn Winn
Alamo, Ga.
I Output per man of the farm
I has increased 145 per cent and
j farm production has increased 57
per cent in 20 years.
ALAMO
Locals—Personals
Parker Padgett and Clewis
Padgett of Atlanta visited rela
tives here last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Pierce and
daughters, Phyllis, of Mclntyre,
yere the week end gue. ts cfMr.
and Mrs. Lamar Purvis.
Mrs. L. M. Achord and Pat,
pent Monday in Macon.
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Wright and
childr; n, Ralph and Lola, of aEst
man, were the guests Sunday of
MT. and Mrs. D. W. Wright.
Mrs. B. W. Hartley, Mr. and
is. W. M. Purvis spent Sunday
n Dublin with B. W. Hartley,
who is a patient at the VA Hos
pital.
Mr. and Mrs. William Heath
spent the week end with relativse
in Savannah.
Mr. and Mrs. O. d. Adams and
amily were the dinner guests
Sunday of Mrs. J. A. Turner.
Mi. and Mrs. Harris White
visited relaitves in Albany last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Gross and
Vicvki visited B. W. Hartley in
me V AHospital in Duolin Sun
day.
Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Adams, Mr.
and Mrs. O. B. Adam.;, Jr., and
Mrs. Evie Browning spent Sun
day with relatives in Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Jenkins of
Charleston are visiting their
sales out of School
TALES OUT OF SCHOOL
JUST' LOOK WHAT YOUR
CHILD COULD STUDY! — Up
at the North Georgia Trade
School at Clarksville, 22 boys and
rls are taking the first course
ever oftered there to become as
istants to laboratory technicians
" hospitals. Some of them are
leady out working in hospitals
Gainesville, Dalton and La
! range, which they must do dur
ing the Ist half of the course,
ney work under registered path
legists. These students must be
n the upper third of their grad
uating class at high school, and
rust have had at least a year of
chemistry. The stndards for this
ourse are high. Huition is free;
joard is $46 a month and in
iudes 1 u , dry cleaning and
nf km y . Another class
taT : b urry. Mrs. Evelyn
' cP ? Tifton who has
be n tear ing in the medical
school at the University of Flo
rida, is in charge of the class. Her
assistant is Mrs. Sonya Bowen,
native of Clayton and former
technician at a hospital in Colum
bia, S.C. Mrs. Bowen’s husband
s coach at Lavoni. Linus Nichols,
usine mnager of the school,
Ils me that the course is one of
,e finest they offer. If your son,
d. lighter is interested, write
i .a - Herbert O. Carlton,
i. th Georgia Trade School,
Clarksville.
IS YOURS — Oscar Wilde once
id that the school should be the
most beautiful place in town. Is
yours? In some communities the
garden clubs take as their project
eing how beautiful they can
make the school. It’s a wonder
;l community service. Which is
he n od beautiful school in Geor
; a'.’ f
HOW MANY WENT?—Do you
now hew rrn , 'y of your June
.aduates a. in college this fall?
A”d how they’re doing? And
h the? they like their home
t wr wel lenough to come back
'I ere to live? What does it offer
them as a home an da place to
■•rn a living?
THT C' FASE MONKEY AND
ME TTACHFR — Does it sur
ia • ; ‘o know that the grease
onkeys in the garages in a cer
। ;n t- n Georgia (not Atlanta)
i, t iq co- a y ear It takes them
from 4 to 6 weeks to prepare for
their job: It takes a teacher four
years and we start her at $3,100.
POWERS’ FLOWERS
♦ Mcßae, Georgj a
Phone 7421 Day or Ni«;ht
Flowers For Al!
Occasions
Servir.-r Alamo, Scotland Glenwood
, And Mcßae, Georgia
mother, Mrs. R. G. Jenkins.
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Bowyer, Mr.
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CURTAIN CALL—Nazism makes a brief and short-lived ap-
Esaranc* in Hollywood, Calif. Fred Joseph, 20, and Leonard
olstein, 30, appear in a police station after they were
mobbed while demonstrating outside a theater. The youths,
who claim to be members of the American Nazi Party, were
protesting the appearance of entertainer Sammy Davis Jr.,
engaged to actress May Britt.
4-H CHRISTMAS
TREES FOR SALE
RED CEDARS (Any Size) $1.5f1 ;
ARIZONA CYPRESS (Any Size; $1.50
Trees Will Be On Sale Beginning
December 12.
Contact Wheeler County 4-H Council
Officers 0- Extension Offic. In
Courthouse in Alamo:
M. K. Jackson, County Agent
Shirley Harris, Home Dem. Agent
Mrs. Annette Harrelson Ext. Clerk
i and Mrs. Willie King and family
■ of Alamo and Mr. and Mrs. Vann
Bowyrr and daughter, June of
Dublin, attended the Trell family
reunion in Odum last Sunday.
Mr. Jim ’1 uT of Yakima, Wash.
J visited his sister, Mrs. Grover
I Bowyer an dfamily last week end.
i Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Holmes vis
ited Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Holmes in
.’a last Simdaw