Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
- "FARM CHATS"
By M. K. JACKSON !
Cotton Insect Control l
It's never too early to talk and|
plan cotton insect control mea-!
sures.
Three of the most important
points to consider in your cotton
insect program this year are ¢he,|
correct timing of insecticides;}
thorough application of the in-|
secticide; and community action|
in cotton insect control. i
Now, you may say, what's this|
about community action? ‘
Well, the more farmers that do|
a GOOD job of controlling the|
boll weevil in this area, the fewer|
weevils we will have to fight dur
ing migration. !
In fact the farmers in one com-;
munity of the state have almostl
completely eliminated weevil mi
gration for several years. They did
this by carrying out an effective
Community-Wide cotton insectl
control program.
If you need any information ofl
your insect control measures this|
wyear, call on me. l:
Fertilizer Is An Invesiment ‘
Do you regard fertilizer as a|
cost or an investment? :
You should regard fertilizer as,f
an investment with a high currentl'
return and many lasting benefits, |
The most promising method toi;
increase your net profit per unit‘:
and also your net farm income is‘;
to increase your production per|
ace. Il
Mo accomplish this objective 4]
you may use more efficient ler-[J
tilizer and lime practices. Remem- |
ber that each dollar spent for fer-l‘
tilizer this year can give you two _]
or three additional dollars to spend|
one year from now. ‘
To determine the correct ~amount|'3
and what kind of fertilizer to use, |
follow these soil test recommen- :
dations. :
Lesser Cornstalk Borer Control :
The lesser cornstalk borer is a ‘
serious pest to a lage number of
crops in this area, especially dur- 7
ing a dry year. :
This borer will attack bea\ns,l
peas, soybeans, corn, sorghum and !
millet. Other crops may also be (
damaged by this pest. ;
Clean cultivation prior to plant- ]
ing has been found to reduce dam- (
age from this pest. By all means, |
turn under all grass, weeds or t
litter deeply at least two weeks|
before planting. Do this ibefore|
two weeks if at all possible. :
In addition, keep the fields
clean during the period between :
turning and planting time. I
This lesser cornstalk borer us- :
ually causes more damage late in|"
the season, so plant suscepti-.ble!r
grops as early as practical. ¢
Contact my office for more in-I
formation on this pest. g?
Sweet Potato Planting lz
Research has shown that plamt-|r
ing dates have more effect on |
sweet potato yields than eitherl
soils or fertilizer.
A long season produces maxi-!!
mum yields of good Georgia sweet|
potatoes. Late or storage v-arietiesil
need at least 160 to 180 days to t
make that maximum yield. }i
By following good cultural prac- i
tices these sweet potatoes can be-)f
come number one potatoes, too.’t
Planting in the field may be-l_
gin in this area about now. In|
fact, they should have already’(l
been planted. Varieties recom-|§
mended are: Georgia Red,-Bunchi,
Portovico, Redskin Early Swect,[;
Sopperskin Goldrush and Unit Iz,
Portovico. :
All danger of frost should beil
past before planting, and m:{kvil
sure they are all planted by Jtmeil
Ist. \
|1
Zinc Sulfate For Pecan Trees |
You have probably heard that"(
some pecan trees need an appli-|_
cation of zinc sulfate. Iy
Pecan trees need zine if rosette]
is present. Pecan trees also necd!f
zinc applied when lime is applied;f
to grove soil. Iy
Other needs for zinc are wheni;
none has ever been applied tol,
your pecan grove, and if none;
has been applied within the last{l
‘-ten years. Et
The zinc sulfate to use on your|,
pecan tree grove is 36 percentl‘
\r\etanic zinc. ],
{ Back to rosette for a momem,’;
/ if the rosette is serious, use one-%l
half pound for each inch in trunk!.
') diameter or for each year of age.}
} As a maintenance rate, you|
should use one-eighth pound of !1
zine sulfate for each inch in trunk|.
diameter or for each year of age.‘t
I have additional information if!;
you need it. :
e ;
Calf Weaning Time i
The weaning time is a very|
critical time in the life of a young
calf. This (being the case, then
you need to pay extra attention
to your management practices at
,&his time in the calf’s life. ;
| At this point the calf will go
'through stress and nervous ten-‘
sion, and it will find it difficult
to adjust to doing without milk.
Calves should be weighed and
graded at weaning time and plac-l
jed in a small pasture or lot. Too
!I;arge an area will allow theml
|too much freedom. i
' Some calves will walk almost‘
‘constantly for three or four days
lirf given too much freedom, so |
Imake sure the pasture or lot is|
small. Now that warm weathers
lis here, this area should have
' NEWS
By D. W. WOODMANSEE,
Conservation Forester i
Union Bag-Camp Paper l
l Corporation
Oil Cans Made From
'Paper And Aluminum
Business Week Magazine re-|
ports that major petroleum com
’panies plan to market oil in a
can made from paper and alumi
num foil.
l R. €. Can Company, of St
lLouis, is manufacturing motor oil
cans that look like steel or alum
inum, but actually are fibre-foil. |
The body of the can is wound |
together from strips of paper
backed aluminum foil and paper
board, interlocked to be leakproof.
Ends of the can are metal.
Business Week said Sun Oil
Company was the first oil mar
keter to test the fibre-foil cans
and approve them for commercial
use, At least ten major compan
ies have taken carload orders, and
others are expected to start test
ing the new cans.
Canadian Lumber Curb Rejected
The Tariff Commission has
turned down the American soft
wood Ilumber industry’s plea to
increase the tariff on lumber im
ports. The Commission noted that,
under the Trade Expansion Act
of 1962, it must find that imports
are ‘“the major factor” causing
the decline of a domestic industry
before it can provide relief. The
Commissioners found unanimously
that factors other than the U. 8.
trade policy were mainly respon
sible for the troubles of the soft
wood lumbet industry in the
West. The most recent tariff con
cession to Canadian lumber im
ports, which was made in 1948,
was not the major cause of the
recent increases in Canadian im- |
ports, the Commission said.
Imports of softwood lumber
from Canada increased from an
average of 1.7 billion board feet
in the immediate postwar years
to 4.5 billion feet last year, ac
cording to Department of Com
merce figures. The 1962 total was
equivalent to 17 percent of total
U. S. softwood production.
Better Utilization Os Wood
Alger-Sullivan Sawmill Com
pany at Century, Fla, a small
town in the tip of northwest Flor
ida, has long produced high-qual
ity longleaf timbers for export or
for strong residential or industrial l
trusses. Today they also poduce'
a variety of items from smaller‘
pieces of longleaf once of little |
or no market value. The new|
items are possible because of im- |
agination and new electronic |
edge-gluing and finger-pointing |
machinery. Here are a few exam-'
ples of Alger-Sullivan’s new px‘od-1
uets: l
Bleacher seats and footboards |
up to 10 inches wide, laminated |
from short pieces and narrowl
strips. !
Bowling alley flooring with as
clear, fine-grained longleaf pine !
surface glued to a 10\\'e:‘-g‘rads;
back. |
Long lengths of high gradei
flooring made up of short pieces|
finger-jointed, and trimmed exact- '
ly to required length, which elim-jT
inates much waste and labor when |
installed at the building site. |
Alger-Sullivan can laminate |
panel stock up to four inchcs{
thick, two feet wide, and 20 feeti
long. They can produce twu-foot-i
wide, one-inch-thick boards for|
about the same unit price as Ix 6 |
tongue - and - groove boards, in|
lengths from six to sixteen feet.]
Dogs, cats and other animals!
can break the stems of young|
plants. Extension Service land- |
scape specialists also point out‘
that they may even try to make '
a bed in the mulch that you add |
to your shrubs. To prevent this
drive two small stakes into the
ground about two inches out from l
both sides of each plant.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, WHEELER COUNTY, GEORGIA
Do You Know
-
Your Library?
How long has it been since you
were in your city’s library? Do
you know what’s been happen
ing there? Your school age son
or daughter does.
l It is an integral part of their
education to acquaint themselves
_iwith the library and use it faith
fully. As they go through high
lschool and into college, they de
ipend on this abundant source of
‘lin-fonmation more completely.
I This, however, is only one facet
of a library. Do you know the
extent of the services your li
brary offers? No longer is the
library only a storehouse for
shelves of intellectual looking vol
umes, carefully tended by an ag
ing spinster. The libraries have
changed. There is something of
interest in every library for the
{ youngest member of your fam
lily to the oldest—from hours of
story telling for tots, to painting
lending services for the house
wife to brighten her home and
change its decor.
i If you haven’t taken notice of
these changes, and don’t know
how you can benefit from them,
then take a trip to your local li
brary. A good time to do it is the
week, April 21 through 27.
At the library you’ll usually
find a standard card catalogue.
i They’re classified alphabetically
either by author, title of the booki
or subject. If you're a “do-it-your
selfer,” you can find ways to
make those jobs professional
looking. If you're in business you
can discover what to look for inl
hiring people. Reading is an edu
cation, |
If it’s a good murder mystery‘
you're after, they have the best.|
Like poetry? They have it. Cur
ious about how F.B.d. men are‘
trained? You can find out. Read
ing is an entertainer.
If you're on a budget like most,
and can’t quite afford that trip
around the world, you can be
come an authority on the world
without ever leaving your home,
Libraries are frequented by all
age groups at all times of the
year. If you're not one of the fre
quenters, why not become one?
Reading is an important part of
American life.
If you're lost in a library, a
good time to get found is National
Library Week, April 21 through
2.
Most libraries will be wide open
with tours, visiting dignataries,
and special events. So, why not
visit the place where your chil
dren spend a lot of their time.
Learn to enjoy your local libra
ry’s facilities and see what they
can offer you. Maybe your visits
will get to be a habit! ;
Georgia Baptists To |
Observe World |
Mission Week
Georgia Baptist churches will
abserve World Missions Week Ap
ril 21-26, with emphasis upon
teaching world mission responsi
bility at every age level through
study: courses. l
Several hundred churches arel
expected to join in the age group
i studies the week of April 21, withl
lother churches participating later
}in the year, according to Garnie’
{ A. Brand, Atlanta, Georgia Bap-l
{tist Convention Training Union
| Leader and World Missions Week
! coordinator. I
| The Georgia Baptist Conven
ltion is cooperating with the!
Southern Baptist Convention in|
Ia seven-year long Baptist Jubileel
iAclvance observance, culminating
{in 1964 with the celebration of(
| the 150th year of organized Bap-'
| tist work on the North American
f continent. |
| During 1963, the Baptist Jubi
| lee emphasis is upon World Mis
; sions. |
'Sanders Paints
| - .
‘Bright Picture
Os Ga. Business
: In a recent two-day span, Gov.
iCarl E. Sanders did a lot of talk
ling about business — future bus
|iness in Georgia which he be
i lieves will move Georgia forward
lat an accelerated pace.
“Georngia is crossing the thres
|hold to business and industrial
| solvency,” he told some 225 busi
’nessmen attending an ‘Atlanta
| luncheon sponsored by Nation's
| Business Magazine. “Gentlemen,
lthe State of Georgia means busi-
Iness . . . GOOD business.”
{ While talking mostly about the
future — and the groundwork
his young administration has laid
to make it brighter and more
profitable for all Georgians —
Gov. Sanders made it clear that
Georgia has not been standing
still. Citing figures compiled by
the Georgia Department of Com
merce (now the Department of
: Industry and Trade), he said:
y| “Georgia during the first quar
|ter of 1963 has seen 77 industrial
{operations and associated busi
nesses created or expanded; 5,140
.Ijobs added; $115,783,000 invested
.|in these operations, and $16,922,-
1500 in payrolls created by these
|77 operations.” |
.| The Governor also pointed out
| that for 18 consecutive monthsl
statewide employment gains ex
| ceeded the year-earlier levels. He
| told of successful legislation spon
|sored by his administration de
,xsigned to improve the state’s eco- |
-|nomy at virtually every level 1
‘ But he dwelt equally heavily
on his administration’s efforts in{
.| the field of education. On that
| point he said:
| “It is my conviction, and the
{conviction of the present admin
' | istration, that education is the
.’omly true key to business andi
{industrial progress in Georgia.
| Education, therefore, has been ac—\
corded the No. 1 priority in state
: l government.” {
’ Gov. Sanders, on the following
|evening in Athens, addressed a |
group of leading businessmen
| visiting Georgia as participants
in the annual Red Carpet Tour of
|Georgia. He told them pretty
|{much the same thing about what
Georgia has done, is doing and
intends to do for business oppor-l
{tunities in the state. Then he
| said:
“We are delighted to have you
with us . . . It is our fervent hope
Ithat what you see of us and our
jstate will make you want to come
{again . . . the next time with
Iyour plants and pocketbooks.”
(General Crop
Report As Os
April 1, 1963
pril 1,
Spring planting to April 1 was
a little behind the normal sched
ule due to continuing cold weath
er. At that date, tobacco trans
planting was about one-third !
completed and corn planting was
active in southern districts. Soils
had not warmed up enough for
much cotton planting, however, a
few fields had been seeded.
Since April 1, much field work
has been accomplished under al
most ideal weather. Rain over
most of the state on April 6 re
plenished soil moisture that was
becoming short, especially in cen
tral and southern counties. Plant
ing is now active in central dis
tricts and underway in the north.
As of April 1, condition of this
iyear’s peach crop averaged 79
{ percent, 3 percentage points above
| condition at that date last year.
lEven though progress was retard
ed by cold temperatures, most of
the lateness has been overcome
since the weather warmed. The
first forecast of production will
be made on May 10.
Georgia’s 1963 winter wheat
crop is estimated at 1,464,000 bu
lshels and compares with 1,175,- |
000 bushels produced last year.
!The production increase is due
lto an increase in acreage over |
the much-reduced plantings last!
iyear.
l Early vegetables are in good
lcondition and growing well. Early
spring cabbage harvest has 'been!
delayed by cold weather, and
volume is not expected before‘
{late April or early May. Trans- |
| planting tomatoes is underway inl
Isouthern areas. Watermelon plant- ;
ing is well advanced in southern |
‘land central areas. !
! Milk production in the statei
Iduring March was estimated at
86 million pounds, compared withl
589 million pounds a year ago and |
lthe 1957-61 average of 90 mi‘:‘xion{
| pounds. |
i Bggs produced on Georgia farms
‘Rabbi Starrels
;To Lecture At
lßrewton - Parker
] Rabbi Solomon Starrels, of
‘| Temple Mickve Israel in Savan
‘nah, will represent the Jewish
‘I Chautauqua Society as lecturer at
H Brewton Parker College in Mt.
Vernon on Monday and Tuesday.
i April 22-23.
{ While on campus the rabbi will
| present 40 volumes of Judaica to
E!the library of Brewton Parker
"College on behalf of the Jewish
'lChautauqua Society.
| Dr. Starrels is spiritual leader
_jof Congregation Mickve Israel in
| Savannah. He previously held
i pulpits in Louisiana, Nebraska
lland London, England.
! “Keep Wheeler County Green®
|Clay Report To
|Help Get Sound
1 Aid Bill — Cocke
The Clay Committee report will
help — not hinder — Congres
sional approval of a sound for
eign aid bill, in the opinion of
1 Georgia’s Erle Cocke Jr., who is
lnow serving as aliernate execu
tive director of the International
lßank for Reconstruction & De
velopment in Washington.
l Addressing the spring meeting
of the University of Georgia So
!ciety’s New York Chapter, held
recently in N w York City, the
Georgian termed the report “a
realistic and constructive apprais
al” of America’s continuing for
eign aid role.
The committee, head=d by Gen.
Lucius D. Clay, U.S.A. (Ret.), re
cently recommended to the Pres
ident changes in the scope and
distribution of US. military and
economic assistance programs. |
{ “A program as big and as com
plex as this one can always pro
fit by constructive criticism,” the
Dawson native said. “The Clay
Committee has performed a val
uable service for both the admin
istration and the Congress. I be
lieve its work has improved the
prospect for passage of a 1963
bill that will be keyed to both
our national capabilities and our
international commitments.”
Cocke, a past national comman
der of the American Legion, who
is a graduate and former busi
ness manager of the University
of Georgia football team, also
advised his fellow alumni _to}
“wait for all the facts” relatingi
to the controversy involving for- |
mer football coach and athleticl
director Wally Butts. Butts has
been accused of giving Ala'bamal
Coach Paul (Bear) Bryant infor
mation which helped Alabama de- ‘
feat Georgia in a game last fall.
Both Butis and Bryant deny the
charges.
“l just can’t believe it’s true,”
Cocke declared. “Wally Butts
earned the confidence and respect
of all of us during his service at
the University. On the basis of
published reports to date, I'm pre
pared to accept the charge as un
true that he abused his position
or in any way dishonored the
University.”
Barnard Recites
Sanders’ Aims To
Negro Teachers I
When D. Douglas Barnard Jr.,
executive secretary to Gov. Carl
E. Sanders, addressed the Geor
gia Teachers and Education As
sociation’s recent convention in
Atlanta, it marked the first time
an official representative of a
Georgia governor ever spoke be
fore the 45-year-old state-wide
Negro organization, according to
GTEA officials.
After extending greetings from
the Governor, Barnard told the
more than 2,000 delegates that by
the end of the state’s 1965 fiscal
year “every teacher in Georgia”
will have received a SSOO pay
raise during a 22-month period.
“And,” he added, “if the econ
omy should show a more marked
limprovement than expected, we
lwould ask the General Assembly
‘to amend the Appropriations Act
to provide another SIOO increasei
as soon as possible. Should the]
zextra SIOO raise materialize, thatl
would leave still a S6OO gap. It
‘is our hope that the state could
Imake that amount available dur
-ling fiscal '66 and fiscal ’67—5300
lin each year.”
i He further said it is hoped that
iGeorgia teachers’ salaries would
Ireach the national average by
jfiscal 1967. Teachers salaries in
IGeorgia last year trailed the na-‘
Itional average by $1,200, he
.pointed out.
i “In reality, finally,” Barnard
;declared. “it is a matter for deci
ision by the people of this state
ito what extent they are willin-g!
§to finance higher quality educa-%
ition in Geongia.” |
l The Sanders administration
tfeels, he said, there are five great
|challenges confronting Georgia
I today. They are:
l 1. Improving educational organ
|izations, administration and fi
{nance at all levels.
i 2. Providing more jobs in an
i expanded, encouraged and grow
{ing business, agricultural and in
dustrial community.
l 3. Securing meaningful govern
-Imental reonganization.
| 4. Obtaining a better delinea
|tion of revenue sources among
{county, city and state govern
k!ments.
| 5. Achieving sound constitu
| tional revision.
| Today’s big shots are little
'lshots that kept on shooting.
Highway Deaths |
Drop For First
Time In Months
!l With March recording an eight
| percent decrease, Georgia's traf
.| sic death toll showed a downward
| trend for the first time in five
imonths. It was the first monthly
decline since Oc‘ober, 1962, when
|a 21 percent drop was recorded
|over the previous year’s counter
l'part.
:} This and other interesting com
.'parisons were revealed in the lat
est consolidated statistics com
|spiled by the Georgia Department
of Public Safety’s Accident Re
'porting Division, just released by
’Col. H. Lowell Conner, director.
Here’'s how 1963’s first quarter
compares with the corresponding
| period a year ago:
I Deaths attributed to traffic ac
| cidents totaled 267 compared with |
1246, an increase of 21, or 9 per-|
icent. Os these, 208 occurred in
!rural areas as against 188 last
lyear, a gain of 20 fatalities, or
i 11 percent. Urban area deaths in
| creased by one, or 2 percent, the"
icomtparative totals being 59 and
|
{ Pedestrian deaths throughout |
the state decreased by two, or 5;
percent. The totals were 39 this;
vyear; 41 in last year’s first quar-
Jler
{ (There were 43,758 more motor
vehicles registered in Georgia
Iduring the three-month period
than a year ago, 954,772 versus |
1911,014, a & percent increase. |
These vehicles traveled 4,386,598,- ‘
‘OB6 miles in 1963’s first quarter,
an increase of 186,624,121 miles,
or 4 percent, over last year.
Georgia’s death rate (based on
lthe number of persons killed to
each 100-million miles traveled)
went up from 5.9 to 6.1, a three
percent jump.
“We hope this downward trend |
in March is a turning point in |
our traffic safety program in
Georgia,” declared Col. Conner. |
“We of the State Patrol will con- |
tinue to do everything possi‘ble‘f
to maintain public safety. If the;;
individual drivers will do thej;
same, the situation will improve.” |
Count a man’s years only if he '
has nothing else to count. '
STATE OF GEORGIA ) ;
WHEELER COUNTY ) |
To All To Whom It May Concern: |
I. L. Miller having, in proper
form, applied to me for Perma- |!
nent Letters of Administration on
the estate of Mrs. Ida (W. A) !l
King, late of said County, this is |
to cite all and singular the credi
tors and next of kin of Mrs. Ida
(W. A) King to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed |]
by law, and show cause, if any !
they can, why permanent admin- \q
istration should not be granted to
I. L. Miller on Mrs. Ida (W. A))
King's estate. i
Witness my hand and official i
signature, this Ist day of April,|!
1963. f
D. N. ACHORD, Ordinary. |
- NOTICE OF SALE |
GEORGlA—Wheeler County: |
By virtue of power of sale con- |
tained in that certain security deed |
executed and delivered by R. B.|:
Grimes and Mattie P. Grimes to |.
Jim Walter Corporation by deed
dated July 30, 1958 and recorded
in Deed Book 26, Page 100, in the |
office of the Clerk of Superior |
Court, Wheeler County, Georgia, |
and subsequently assigned to the|
i undersigned by virtue of an as-|.
| signment dated July 22, 1960 and |
recorded in Deed Book 24, Page
|386, in the office of the Clerk of |
Superior Court, Wheeler County,
Georgia, there will be sold at pub
lic outery before the courthouse |
door in said state and county by |
the undersigned, during the legal |
hours of sale, on the Tth day of
May, 1963, to the highest bidder |:
for cash, the following described |
property, to-wit: ]
{All that tract or parcel of la.nd|
lying and being in Wheeler Coun- |
ty, Georgia, in the 11th Land Dis- |
trict of Wheeler County, startingi
in the South East to West direc- |
tion a distance of 300 feet to the ‘
point of beginning, thence in a|
Southernly direction a distance of |
210 feet to a stake bounded by |
R. H. Graham, thence in a west- l
lem}y direction a distance of 210§
feet to a stake bounded by R. H. |
| Graham; thence in a Northernly |
direction a distance of 210 feet |
to a stake bounded by R. H. Gra
‘ham; thence in a Easternly direc
tion a distance of 210 feet to a
lstake bounded by Highway 280,
| this being part of land conveyed
{ to Graham recorded in Deed Book
14, Folio 553.
Said property will be sold for
the purpose of paying the indebt
| edness secured by said deed; and
| the proceeds of the sale will be
applied to the payment of said
| indebtedness and interest and all
charges and expenses in connec
| tion with this foreclosure as pro- |
vided in said deed and the bal
ance, if any, will be turned over
| to the said R. B. Grimes and Mat- |
| tie P. Grimes. |
| This Bth day of April, 1963.
MID-STATE INVESTMENT
CORPORATION
.1 As Attorney in Fact for
R. B. GRIMES and
| MATTIE P. GRIMES.
| Perry, Walters & Langstaff,
Attorneys at Law, Albany, Gg.z »
-4t
FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1963
l—_————'—'—"-—-—-—.—-
AT A N ALY SO T i AAT TP e O A SAT S 154 e N
MALE HELP WANTED
Openings for 2 route men or wo
men. May earn up to S3O per
day or more. Experience un
necessary — will train. Write
~ McNESS CO., Box 2766, Mem
- phis 2, Tenn. 1-2tpd
| R ——
OPPORTUNITY open for ambi
tious man to earn $112.50 per
week, and more, on availafie
Watkins Route in this area. Age
up to 67. This Route also avail
able to a lady between 40 and
60, For interview in your ares,
write Watkins, 659 West Peach
tree St. N.E., Atlanta 8. 1-3 t
“Sarah Coventry has openings in
this community for white lad
ies, No investment or delivery.
Write Juanita Dent, 2217 Bacon
Park Drive. Savannah, Geor
gia,” 52-2¢
FOR SALE ...
PIANOS
GRINDLE ELECTRIC COM.
PANY is having a giant sale on
all pianos. Just received a truck
load of Factory Rebuilt Pianos
~ going at rock bottom prices.
New Pianos at a big saving also
~ used pianos cheap. See us be.
fore you buy. Phone 2281,
LONG TERM FARM LOANS —
Plans may be adjusted to meet
your individual needs, Mode
rate interesit. Prompt closing.
Courteous and confidential
service. For full details, see or
write J. C, Bivins, Mount Ver
non, Ga. 13-If,
FEDERAL LAND BANK LOANS
for farmers in Toombs, Tati
nall, Montgomery, and Wheel
er Counties are available
through the Federal Land Bank
Association of Swainsboro. Loans
~ run up to 40 years. Can be paid
any time without penaity» Pro
ceeds can be used to buy land,
pay debts, make improvements,
or to finance almost any need
of the farm or family. For de
tails, see or write, E. O. Mc-
Kinney, Manager, P. O. Box
148, or Mitchell Bldg. in Swains
boro, Ga. or at Courthouse in
Alamo, Ga. on Ist and 3rd
Thursday morning at 10:00 a.m.
TAX SALE
GEORGlA—Wheeler County
I will sell before the Court
house Door of Wheeler County,
Georgia, between the legal hours
of sale, on the first Tuesday in
May, 1963, to the highest bidder
for cash, the following described
property, levied and will be sold
to satisfy the following Tax Fi
Fas for State, County and School
Taxes for the years herein speci
fied:
That certain Lot in the City of
Alamo, Wheeler County, Georgia;
fronting 50 feet on Broad Street
and running back in even width
a distance of 150 feet along and
parallel to Fourth Avenue. Lev
ied on and will be sold as the
property of Lovie Lewis Est., to
satisfy Tax Fi Fas for State, Coun
ty and School Tax for the year
1960 and 1961.
Also at the same time and
place: 5 acres in shape of a square
carved out of East Corner of Lot
of Land No. 269 in 10th Land Dis
trict, Wheeler County, Georgia.
Levied and will be sold as the
property of Wimbric and Jack
Walker, to satisfy Tax Fi Fa for
State, County and School Tax for
the year 1961.
Also at the same time and place:
5 acres carved out of East Corner
of Lot No. 278 11th Land Dis
trict in Wheeler County, Georgia.
Levied on and will be sold as the
property of ‘W. C. Powell, to sat
isfy Tax Fi Fa for State, County
and School Tax for the year 1961.
Also at the same time and place:
10 acres in the form of a s%uar&
carved out of East Corner of Lot
of Land No. 488 in the 7th Land
District of Wheeler County, Geor
gia. Levied on and will be sold
as the property of John H. Elton,
to satisfy Tax Fi Fa for State,
County and School for the year
1961,
J. M. JOHNSON, Sheriff
Wheeler County, Ga. 52-4 t
May 30 Deadline
For Farm Bureau
Scholarship Entry
May 30 is the deadline for sub
mitting entries in the 1963 Geor
gia Farm Bureau Scholarship
iAward program, Mrs. Willett
‘Robinson, State Chairman of
'Farm Bureau Women reported
today.
| Applications should be filed
' through the County Farm Bureau
| The scholarship awards pro
lgram will be limited to $2,000.
lFour scholarships of SSOO each
;wiil be awarded to two rural boys
land two rural girls. Participants
Imust be interested in studying
{agriculture or home economics in
|the University of Georgia system
‘or Berry College.
| Scholarship award winners will
'have their funds divided quarter
!ly into payments against tuition
land other expenses.
| Applicants must be qualified ta
lenter college the fall term of the
current year. Recipients of the
scholarships must maintain atl
least a B average in pursuing
their studies at the college level
“The scholarships will be award
ed to youth among Farm Bureau
member families in the state,”
Mrs. Robinson said.