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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-K

_X_ ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(D) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934 (FEE REQUIRED)

For the fiscal year ended______MARCH 30, 1996___________________________or

___ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(D) OF THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (NO FEE REQUIRED)
For the transition period from _______________ to _________________

COMMISSION FILE NUMBER:____1-7138_________________________________________
________________________________CAGLE'S, INC._____________________________
(EXACT NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED IN ITS CHARTER)

___________GEORGIA_____________________________________58-0625713_________
(STATE OF INCORPORATION) I.R.S EMPLOYER IDENTIFICATION NO.

_______2000 HILLS AVE., NW, ATLANTA, GA.______________________30318_______
(address of principal executive offices) (zip code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: ___(404) 355-2820_____

SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(B) OF THE ACT:
Title of each class Name of exchange on which registered

____CLASS A COMMON STOCK___________________AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE________

SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(G) OF THE ACT:
________________none______________________________________________________

INDICATE BY CHECK MARK WHETHER THE REGISTRANT (1) HAS FILED ALL REPORTS
REQUIRED TO BE FILED BY SECTION 13 OR 15(D) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT
OF 1934 DURING THE PRECEDING 12 MONTHS (OR FOR SUCH SHORTER PERIOD THAT
THE REGISTRANT WAS REQUIRED TO FILE SUCH REPORTS) AND (2) HAS BEEN SUBJECT
TO SUCH FILING REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PAST 90 DAYS. _X_ YES ___ NO

STATE THE AGGREGATE MARKET VALUE OF THE VOTING STOCK HELD BY NONAFFILIATES OF
THE REGISTRANT. (THE AGGREGATE MARKET VALUE SHALL BE COMPUTED BY REFERENCE TO
THE PRICE AT WHICH THE STOCK WAS SOLD, OR THE AVERAGE BID AND ASKED PRICES OF
SUCH STOCK, AS OF A SPECIFIED DATE WITHIN 60 DAYS PRIOR TO THE DATE OF FILING.)
__$30,573,618_(based_on_15.375_per_share_closing_price_on_May_21,_1996)___

INDICATE THE NUMBER OF SHARES OUTSTANDING OF EACH OF THE REGISTRANT'S CLASSES
OF COMMON STOCK, AS OF THE LATEST PRACTICABLE DATE (APPLICABLE ONLY TO
CORPORATE REGISTRANTS.)
__Class_A_Common_Stock_at_$1.00_par_value______________________________________
__5,006,282_shares_at_$1.00_par_value__________________________________________



DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE: LIST THE FOLLOWING DOCUMENTS IF
INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE AND THE PART OF THE FORM 10-K INTO WHICH THE DOCUMENT
IS INCORPORATED: (1) ANY ANNUAL REPORT TO SECURITY HOLDERS; (2) ANY PROXY OR
INFORMATION STATEMENT; AND (3) ANY PROSPECTUS FILED PURSUANT TO RULE 424(b) OR
(c) UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933. (THE LISTED DOCUMENTS SHOULD BE CLEARLY
DESCRIBED FOR IDENTIFICATION PURPOSES.)
Parts of the following documents are incorporated by reference in Parts II,
III, and IV of this Form 10-K report; 1) registrant's annual report to
shareholders for fiscal year ended March 30, 1996 - Items 5, 6, 7, 8, and 14.
2) Proxy statements for registrant's 1996 annual meeting of shareholders-
Items 10, 11, 12, and 13.



CAGLE'S, INC.

PART I

Item 1: General Business

Cagle's, Inc. (the "Company"), which began business in 1945 and was first
incorporated in Georgia in 1953, and its wholly owned subsidiary (Cagle's Farms
,Inc., formerly Strain Poultry Farms, Inc.) produce, market, and distribute a
variety of fresh and frozen poultry products. The vertically integrated
operations of the Company consist of breeding, hatching, and growing of
chickens; feed milling; processing; further processing; and marketing. The
Company's products are sold to national and regional independent and chain
supermarkets, food distributors, food processing companies, national fast-food
chains, and institutional users, such as restaurants, schools, and
distributors, by the Company's sales staff located in Atlanta, Georgia, and
through brokers selected by the Company.


Narrative Description of Business

Food Processing

All of the Company's business activities are conducted on a vertically
integrated basis within one industry segment, poultry products. The Company's
various poultry products are closely related, have similar purposes and uses,
and, except for product sold under cost-plus arrangements, are similar in terms
of profitability and types and degrees of risks. In addition, the production
processes are similar to the extent that (a) production facilities are shared
or are interchangeable and (b) the same types of raw materials, labor, and
capital are used. Markets and marketing methods are comparable for all
products (except cost-plus products) to the extent that they are generally sold
to the same types of customers by a common sales force and are sensitive to
changes in economic conditions to the same degree.

The Company currently processes approximately 2,100,000 birds per week in its
three processing plants, including two plants which operate with two full
shifts. Of the Company's total production, approximately 1,150,000 head per
week are deboned. In March 1993, the Company placed one of its processing
plants into a joint venture with a major customer, reducing the total company
volume by 365,000 birds per week at that time.

The complete cycle for growing broilers begins with the placement on a farm of
a day-old breeder chick. This bird is reared for 25 weeks, at which time it
begins to produce hatching eggs. The breeder produces eggs for approximately
40 weeks. These eggs are set in one of the Company's two hatcheries, and in
three weeks, a baby chick is hatched.

The day-old broiler chick is placed on a farm where it will grow for six to
eight weeks depending upon the size of bird desired, at which time it is
transported to the processing plant for slaughter. To produce uniform size for
customer demands, the Company grows the males and females separately. This is
necessary because males and females grow at different rates and have different
nutritional requirements for cost-effective growth. A significant investment
in field inventories is required to support the Company's operating cycle.



All feed for all flocks is produced in feed mills owned by the Company.

The Company's goal is to add value to all of its birds, and the Company
currently is accomplishing this on approximately 85% of all head slaughtered.
This value-added product takes the form of deboned breast and thigh meat,
cut-up marinated raw breaded chicken (including barbecue), government school
lunch product, fast-food cuts, IQF (individually quick frozen) products, and
mechanically deboned chicken meat.

Raw Materials

The primary raw materials used by the Company are corn, soybean meal, and other
ingredients; packaging materials; cryogenic materials; and breeder chicks. The
Company believes that sources of supply for these materials are adequate and
does not expect significant difficulty in acquiring required supplies. The
major source of supply is the midwestern grain belt of the United States,
although local supplies are utilized when available. Prices for the feed
ingredients are sensitive to supply fluctuations worldwide, and weather
conditions, especially drought, can cause significant price volatility. Since
feed is the most significant factor in the cost of producing a broiler chicken,
those fluctuations can have significant effects on margins. The Company also
purchases product outside for further processing requirements.

Research and Development

The Company has made no material expenditures for research and development
during the last three years.

Employees and Labor Relations

The Company employs approximately 3,500 persons of whom approximately 53% are
covered by collective bargaining agreements which expire at various dates over
the next three years. The Company believes its relationship with the
bargaining groups and other employees is good.

Seasonal Variations in Business

The seasonal demand for the Company's products is highest during the late
spring and summer months and is normally lowest during the winter months.

Customers

Equity Foods ("Equity") accounted for approximately 22% of the Company's sales
for the year ended March 30, 1996. The Company has an agreement with Equity to
supply chicken under a cost-plus arrangement, and approximately 24% of the
Company's production is committed to Equity. Under the arrangement, production
in excess of Equity's demands and by-products are sold to other customers and
are credited against the cost-plus arrangement. The Company generally receives
full margin on processed pounds regardless of the final customer.

Backlog

The Company had no material backlog of orders existing as of March 30, 1996.




Competition

The Company is a leading regional integrated poultry processor, ranking
ninth nationally in pounds produced. The Company's products compete in the
marketplace with comparable products of approximately ten national and regional
producers in the areas of quality, service, and price. The Company believes
its flexibility and accessibility are positive factors enhancing the Company's
competitive position.

Regulation

The Company's facilities and operations are subject to regulation by various
federal and state agencies, including, but not limited to, the federal Food
and Drug Administration ("FDA"), the United States Department of Agriculture
("USDA"), the Environmental Protection Agency, the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration, and the corresponding state agencies. The Company's
processing plants are subject to continuous on-site inspection by the USDA,
and the FDA inspects the production of the Company's feed mill.
Management believes that the Company is in substantial compliance with
applicable laws and regulations relating to the operation of its facilities.
Subsequent to March 30, 1996 the Company was cited by OSHA for several
violations at its Macon, Georgia plant and assessed a fine of $88,000. The
Company has paid the fine in full settlement of the citation.


Item 2: Properties

Production and Facilities

Breeding and Hatching

The Company supplies its broiler chicks by producing all of its own hatching
eggs from breeder flocks owned by the Company. These breeder flocks are
maintained on 61 contract grower farms. In addition, the replacement breeder
pullets are maintained on 32 contract grower farms where the breeders are
reared from one day old to approximately 18 weeks old and then moved to the
breeder farm where they begin to produce eggs at about 25 weeks of age.
These farms are located in north Georgia.

The Company owns two hatcheries located in Dalton, Georgia, and Forsyth,
Georgia, at which eggs are incubated and hatched. This is a continuous
process and requires 21 days to complete. After the chicks are removed
from the incubator, they are separated by sex, vaccinated against disease,
and moved by a special-purpose vehicle, Chick Bus, to the Company's grow-out
farms. The two hatcheries have an aggregate capacity of 2,100,000 chicks per
week. Both of the hatcheries are company-owned.

Grow-Out

The Company places its broiler chicks on approximately 283 contract grower
farms. The birds are grown separately by sex to provide the exact size
requirement of the Company's customers.

The independent contract growers provide the housing, equipment, utilities,
and labor to grow the baby chicks to market age, which varies from six to
eight weeks, depending on the market for which they are intended. The Company
supplies the baby chicks, the feed, and all veterinary and technical services.
Title to the birds remains with the Company at all times. The contract
growers are paid on live weight and are guaranteed a minimum rate with



various incentives based upon a grower's performance as compared to other
growers whose birds are marketed during the same week. These contract
farms are located in Georgia, Tennessee, and Alabama.

Feed Mills

The Company owns one feed mill with a production capacity of approximately
520,000 tons per year. The mill is located in Dalton, Georgia. An
additional feed mill in Camilla, Georgia, was completed in 1993 and
contributed to Cagle's Foods in March 1993. A new feed mill in Forsyth,
Georgia, has the capacity to produce approximately 300,000 tons annually.

Processing

As the broilers reach the desired processing weight, they are removed from the
houses and transported by company trucks to a processing plant.

The processing plants are located in Pine Mountain, Georgia; Macon, Georgia;
and Collinsville, Alabama. The Macon, Georgia, plant has the capacity to
process 8,400 birds per hour, and the Collinsville plant can process up to
12,600 birds per hour. The Pine Mountain plant which was destroyed by
fire in June 1995 but has since been rebuilt now has the capacity to produce
10,800 per hour. The Macon, Georgia, and Collinsville, Alabama, plants
operate two full shifts.

Further Processing and Deboning

The Company has a stated goal of marketing the majority of its product as
value-added product. This is accomplished by cutting the product into parts
or fast-food cuts, deboning, marinating and breading, and converting into
other convenience-type products.

Currently, further processing and deboning are conducted at the Collinsville,
Alabama, plant (cutting, marinating, and breading) and the Pine Mountain and
Macon, Georgia, plants (deboning). In addition, the Atlanta, Georgia,
facility and the Lovejoy, Georgia, facility are totally devoted to further
processing.

Freezer Storage

The Company's facilities located in Atlanta, Georgia; Collinsville, Alabama;
Pine Mountain, Georgia; and Lovejoy, Georgia, have freezer storage facilities
with aggregate capacity of approximately 6,800,000 pounds of frozen product.
The Company utilizes outside storage services as needed to supplement its own
freezer capacity.

Local Distribution

As an extension of the company sales division, two local distribution divisions
are operated from separate refrigerated warehouse facilities in Atlanta,
Georgia, and Birmingham, Alabama. These units have sales representatives
located in Macon, Georgia, as well as Atlanta, and are designed to provide
storage and delivery service for those customers in their operating areas.

Significant Unconsolidated Subsidiaries

The Company owns a 50% interest in a joint venture, which is a fully integrated
poultry company located in Camilla, Georgia. This joint venture was created in
March, 1993 from the contributed assets of the Company's former south Georgia



and north Florida operations. The joint venture is growing and processing
approximately 950,000 birds per week in a processing plant that is capable of
processing up to 1,400,000 broilers per week. A new hatchery was placed into
service on March 28, 1994, and a new processing plant began operations in April
1995. The Company acquired a minority interest in a poultry by-product company
in November 1994. In December 1995, the Company acquired a 1/3 interest in a
grower housing financing company. The company finances poultry houses for
growers in the South Georgia area who are contract growers for the joint
venture company.

Executive Offices

The Company's executive offices are located in a renovated two-story
(22,000-square-foot) building at 2000 Hills Avenue, NW, Atlanta, Georgia.
The building is owned by the Company.

Some of the Company's property, plant, and equipment are encumbered to
secure long-term debt of the Company.

All of the properties described above are in good condition and are adequate
for their stated uses.

Item 3: Legal Proceedings

The Company is involved in various lawsuits and legal matters on an ongoing
basis as a result of its day-to-day operations; however, the Company does not
believe that the ultimate resolution of these matters will have a material
adverse effect on the Company or its business.

Item 4: Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

No matters were submitted to security holders for a vote during the fourth
quarter of fiscal 1996.



PART II

Item 5: Market for Registrant's Common Equity
and Related Stockholder Matters

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Annual
Report to Stockholders for the year ended March 30, 1996 and is incorporated
herein by reference.


Item 6: Selected Financial Data

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Annual
Report to Stockholders for the year ended March 30, 1996 and is incorporated
herein by reference.


Item 7: Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Annual
Report to Stockholders for the year ended March 30, 1996 and is incorporated
herein by reference.



Item 8: Financial Statements and Supplementary Data

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Annual
Report to Stockholders for the year ended March 30, 1996 and is incorporated
herein by reference.

Item 9: Changes in and Disagreements With Accountants
on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

None.



PART III

Item 10: Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Proxy
Statement for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held July 12, 1996 and
is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 11: Executive Compensation

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Proxy
Statement for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held July 12, 1996 and
is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 12: Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Proxy
Statement for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held July 12, 1996 and
is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 13: Certain Relationships and Related Transactions

The information required by this item is included in the Company's Proxy
Statement for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held July 12, 1996 and
is incorporated herein by reference.



PART IV

Item 14: Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form 8-K

The following documents are filed as part of this report:

(a)1. Financial Statements

The Company's 1996 Annual Report to Stockholders contains the consolidated
balance sheets as of March 30, 1996 and April 1, 1995, the related consolidated
statements of income, stockholders' equity, and cash flows for each of the
three years in the period ended March 30, 1996, and the related report of
Arthur Andersen LLP as to these financial statements. These financial
statements and the report of Arthur Andersen LLP are incorporated herein by
reference.
The financial statements, incorporated by reference, include the following:

Consolidated Balance Sheets--March 30, 1996 and April 1, 1995



Consolidated Statements of Income for the Years Ended March 30, 1996,
April 1, 1995, and April 2, 1994

Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity for the Years Ended
March 30, 1996, April 1, 1995, and April 2, 1994

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Years Ended March 30,
1996, April 1, 1995, and April 2, 1994

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements--March 30, 1996, April 1, 1995,
and April 2, 1994

(a)2. Financial Statement Schedules

The financial statement schedules have been omitted because they are not
applicable or the required information is included in the consolidated
financial statements or notes thereto.


Reports on Form 8-K

A report on Form 8-K was filed in April 1995 to disclose the Company's new
unsecured revolving credit agreement.




Signatures

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Cagle's, Inc.

BY: /s/ J. Douglas Cagle
J. Douglas Cagle
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report
is signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in
capacities and on the date indicated:

/s/ J.Douglas Cagle Chairman and Director and Chief Executive Officer

/s/ Kenneth R. Barkley Senior Vice President Finance/Treasurer/Chief
Financial Officer/Director/ Principle Financial
and Accounting Officer

/s/ G. Bland Byrne Director

/s/ George Douglas Cagle Vice President, New Product Development
and Director

/s/ John J. Bruno Senior Vice President Sales Marketing and Director

/s/ James David Cagle Vice President, New Product Sales and Director

/s/ Jerry D. Gattis President, Chief Operating Officer and Director

/s/ Mark M. Ham IV Vice President, Information Systems and Director

/s/ Candace Chapman Director