bit JQHN A. MeWHCHT Staff Oorrrapondeat of The Wall Street Joara&l f *- ""^4(1 i"*' Continued From Thursday's Issue ^ Costing Qcaas Processed Seeds, Inc., to bow running tests on different mlx tnres for coatings to bo wed on "Umo stem" and created wheat grass. If these are snoceasfnl, the Government wJU buy enough pel leted seed to sow 65,000 acres of burned-over range in Wyoming and Idaho this fall. In hiB office at Midland, Dr. Vogelsang of Pro cessed Seeds has a box with a dosen rows of these two "grasses" several inches high. Fifty seeds were sown in each row. Only 14 of the bare seeds grew. In the row with the best pelleted seed, 46 of the 50 spronted. Do you grow tomatoes in your garden T With pelleted Mods, yon won't hare to set out plants. The digging and water lugging that go with transplanting can happily be dispensed with. With coating it is possible to sow tomatoes two to three weeks earlier than bare seed. As a result, pelleted seed will produce fruit at about the came time as transplanting do, ac cording to Processed Seeds. Pelleted seed offers big poten tial sayings to commercial toma to growers. In northern Illinois, it costs farmers $15 to $20 an acre to set ont an arce of toma toes. By drilling or "checkrow ing" pelleted seed, they should be able to plant an acre for $2. Enough plants for an acre ooet from $12.60 to $18. Five pounds of seed pellets, which is enough for an acre, cost $1.50. Labor costs for setting plants will run between $1.50 and $4. Putting in an acre of pelleted seed requires about 50 cents worth of labor. Growers have obtained varying results with pelleted tomato seed. One of the biggest users of toma toes, the Campbell Soup Co., has been experimenting with coated seeds. Dr. S. G. Younkin, chief of Campbell's experimental farm at Riverton, N. J,, termed results thus far as "highly disappoint ing." The seeds were slow to em erge from the ground in one test and in others extra moisture was Permanent Wares $3.00 up All Waves Reduced All Standard Materials Used. Mae's Beauty Salon Mrs. Jake Church Owner TELEPHONE 7M „«4«1 to m»*« T.^mor. Bit OtHdr ii |,.,.»M. corMU % fSjg- «««• »•" M" "°Ml«te4 «*4 otftmi °°"°* SJ'Tthf^U. to •»' *»" ta, machine. So *«« UU*« 7 into • pound of ed Seed*. Inc., w . j tor 4 cento a pound, n°t oniy el minating the fus* but a s ping the seed. In a insures better growth. firm deaUng In cotton seed, Mid Sonth Supply Co., ot Me®phlj. .W <'J" I ed cotton seed this year vu its performance. Added Bye Appeal Through pelleting, seed, can to s,™. «Ud«l may make them, sell better, y introducing a little Pjf1®"* ** the mixture used for the eating, they can be made any de^re^8 or bast year, Processed Seeds colored sugar beet J^Uet. red. white and blue. Ift helped f who planted three types of beets keep them separate. Pelleting otters an opportunity to do a better Job wttbjhemlcjJ weed killers. Many of these are just as deadly to flowers and vegetables as to the weeds^ « sprinkled on the ^*n^tb * t kill both good and bad seeds. Bu Processed Seeds has discovered that a coating of active carbon on the outside of a seed Protects " from such chemical weed killers as 2-4-D. The chemical kills the weed seeds but has lost its potency by the time the coated seeds em erge through the ground. Special chemical mixtures make the seeds distasteful to crows and rodents. Seed processors apply coat ing by whirling the seeds In a re volving spherical chamber in much the same way as candy cov ered nuts are produced. Proces sed Seeds, Inc., sticks the ingre dients an with a water-soluble ad hesive that frees the seed from its coating when there's proper ground moisture for good grow ing. Filtrol coats seeds with a specially processed volcanic ash that is sticky when wet and adds other ingredients according to customers' specifications. The pel lets can be made almost any size but most are coated until they I become about as big as a pea. i What goes in the different I coatings? Fertilizer and homones [are included to promote quick I growth. Fungicides and insecti cides are added to protect against diseases and insects; they are also helpful in keeping the germ in the seed alive when the weath er is bad. Processed Seeds is ex perimenting with other growth stimulants Including amino acids, ; r That feeling of BELONGING Hard to beat Isn't It? That foaling of being accepted—of being a respected past of yoor community. A business—like a man—is Judged by the way it does business. To be accepted it must, of course, be law-abiding. It must fill a community need. It must create Jobs ... pay taxes... meet its obligations.., keep its self respect. A case in point is the business of sell ing beer a self-regulated, legal business. Because it meets all these requirements, it has come to belong. And having merited your support and respect, this business is continually work ing to retain your confidence. How? By cooperating with State and enforcement agencies strict control beer is Picked To SMk Senator Hoey's Seat H. B. LEAVTTT -ASHEVILiLE—Halsey B. Leav itt, Aaheville insurance man, will be the Stat* Republican conven tion's nominee in the West for the United States Senate, J. M. Baley Jr., chairman of the Re publican State Executive Commit tee, announced hare yesterday. Leavitt, Baley said, was the un snimoos choice of a nominating committee composed of Republi cans from all parts of the State. As a candidate for the west, Leavitt will oppose the Democrat ritamin B1 and eren dried animal blood to draw nitrogen out of the air. ft>r soils that hare a mineral deficiency, the firm is trying out small amounts of boron, manga nese and the like in its pellets. How much do pelleted seeds cost? Burgess sells packets for backyard gardeners at 20 cents each, about twice what its bare seeds bring. There are fewer of the coated seeds per packet, but they produce more vegetables. Processed Seeds, Inc., recently listed its prices for pelleting in quantity. The firm will pellet 28 different kinds of vegetable, flower, grass and tree seeds at from 13 to IS cepts a pound. two announced Democratic can didates. Also announcing for office yes terday were A* W. Whitehurst, Marshall banker, who will seek the Republican nomination for the 11th Congressional District seat, and Colonel John A. Wagner of Asheville, Spanish-American War veteran, who filed as the party's nominee for Congress in the 12th District. W. C. Henessee of Sylra was nominated at the recent 12th Dis trict convention but withdrew Wednesday. o— Enrollment At , Appalachian Now At High Record Boon^ — The enrollment for the year at Appalachian State Teachers college has claimed to the all-time high of 1869, with the opening of the spring quar ter, according to H. R. Bggers, registrar. An analysis of the figures shows that there hare been 630 men enrolled, and 719 women. The number of graduates for the year, including those expecting to graduate at the end of the term is 124, 86 men and 88 women. Last summer the college had the largeet number of students* prer to register for a rammer quarter. According: ot ChapeU Wil son, director of the rammer schools, this, icmme/ is expected to reach or to exceed last sum mer's enrollment. Enrollment in the graduate school is expected to be the largest since graduate work has been offered. ■ o" Meat production under Fed eral inspection for the weak ended March 11, totaled 190 mil lion -V' NOTICE OF SALE OF personal Property . By Virtue of .the power of sale contained in a certain chattel mortgage, executed by Paul Bald win to the undersigned mortga gee, said mortgage being ghren to secure a note, and the party hay ing failed to pay said note, the same being past due and unpaid, the undersigned will expose to publk sale to the highest bidder for cash in front of the Wiles Garage in the village of Traphill, North Carolina, at 12:00 o'clock noon, on March 28, 1960, the fol lowing described personal proper ey, to wit: One Buick Sedan Coupe, Motor Number 44206634, Serial Number 14031404, known as the Atlas Shepherd ear. Terms ef said sale are cash on the day of the sale. This the 7th day of March, 1960. ARVEL PRUITT, Mortgagee. 8-16-2t (T)