State Auto Licenses Sates Pass MSlion Drivers. Cautioned to Remove 1951 Plates , From Cars New license tag sales have perked up over the entire state the Depart ment of Motor Vehicles reports. The department’s registration di vision said that 1952 tag sales had passed the one million mark, while remembering that last year only 926,- 288 had been issued as of the same date. 'Department licensing officials prais ed North Carolina motorists for se curing their new plate promptly. They also cautioned driver’s against leaving their old 1951 front tag at tached to their car. Violators are subject to prosecution, they said, and the old tag should be removed at once. ' fINMf B I MSEtM I if 7W Kitting > I If ■George Armstrong Custer belongs a to the great company of adventurers , Who gave us the West—early trail blazers like Kit Carson and Jim Bridger, and the solders who came afterward and wrested it from the Indians. However, he was far from being the ! tough backwoodsman like Carson and Bridger. He was as at home in New York and Washington drawing,rooms as on the frontier. As a hunter he took part in those fabulous shooting raids on big game. His letters to his wife were filled with accounts of these trips. Writing of the Army’s expedition on the Yellowstone, he said: “I killed and brought into camp 41 antelope, four buffalo, four elk, seven deer— also captured alive a wildcat and a porcupine, amiable creatures I still possess.” He was an hmateur taxi dermist and enjoyed supplying nat uralist societies with animal speci mens. ■Custer was born in 1839 at New Burnley, Ohio. His father was a farm er and had his heart set on George becoming a minister. But the boy’s head was filled with ideas of out door sport and dreams of glory. When he graduated from school at first he tried teaching. Then he secured an appointment at the U. S. Military Academy. HU record there, according to Mor an Tudury, one of his biographers, was far from impressive. He was lively rather than studious. When he graduated it was without any honors at all. He was last in a class of 34. But three days after he left West Point he found himself up to hU neck in the Civil War. His first engage ment was a complete route for the Federal Army but Custer was one of the few men who distinguished him self by his cool. behavior. Now his a I > • agSßTO^gSS^Si*'**"^ Here’s the big ... most powerful car in its class! Designed te oaf-perform... oat-rida... oot-sixo any other lev-priced car miueage maker sixi an the American Read! ,» • Never before did so little money bay perform- WSips *• '. ance to match that of the ’52 Ford. Take your Wp foipujsloe choice of new Mileage Maker Six, or Strato-Star V-8. (CzCvjfg|sl\ STRATO-STAR V-OI No other car in its class can equal Ford’s smooth* riding, corner-hugging roadability. No other can vx match its new beautiftil Coachcraft Bodies ... its huge curved one-piece windshield and car-wide A.- _ rear window ... its convenient Center-Fill Fueling sjffSni A £ r S~ ft # \~fa /C JMK ... its Power-Pivot Clutch and Brake Pedals. Here is a car that is truly the ablest car on the yd r ! Vp T American Road ... a car that meets the widest ill \J» ~ \ /itth-lfa range of motorists' needs. Fixamine it carefully. 11 1 UI!PSgSA = --jMi[ltt)lx S ‘Test Drive” it. You’ll agree you can’t buy better! f v*