-*.. V. 



♦- 



^G/un Rwiecu4. 



$1 



News In Pictures 



Paid for clear, close up, natural, unusual photos. NO 

 OTHERS ACCEPTED. Action pictures that tell a story 

 preferred. Enclose stamps for return. 



SOUTHERN GRANDEUR 

 Natchez, Mississippi, the 

 oldest town in the state, is 

 noted tor its fine old southern 

 colonial homes like this one. 

 The town was founded in 

 1716, named after a tribe of 

 Indians and was the site of 

 Fort Rosalie, the first French 

 territorial outpost in the new 

 world. Flags of France, Eng- 

 land, Spoin and United States 

 have ilown over Natchez. 



POOR MANS HORSE 



Along the road North 

 of Hattiesburg, Missis- 

 sippi this Jersey steer, 

 age 4. is making good 

 as a beast of burden. 

 "When he gets a few 

 years older we'll butch- 

 er and eat him," said 

 the driver, "and break 



SALINE COUNTY CORN 

 "We use the cobs for fence posts, the stalks we sell to the 

 power company lor poles and grind the kernels in a rock 

 crusher," says Harold Wilson, vo-ag teacher at Eldorado who 

 sent in this prize picture. One ear is a load for Maurice and 

 James Wilson's wagon. Seed is not available — it won't grow 

 outside Saline county. 



PRODUCTION CREDIT USER 

 Homer C. Adams, Pike county, one of the first members of 

 the Mississippi Valley Production Credit Association at Pitts- 

 field, feeds hogs and cattle. 



fl^^^S^'P '-'>A 





^9\ 



,m 



;»U»« 



K.CKT" 







»*,---CS, 





•«;r'v> 



BEE-LIEVE IT OR NOT! 

 A swarm of bees, looking for a permanent ad- 

 dress, found it on Bee Brothers' mail box. The Bees 

 are St. Clair county Farm Bureau members. Prize 

 photos by A. D. Jenkins. 



.■•i> ^- 





