Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Nov. 1, 1951, edition 1 / Page 10
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Completes Course 1 At Lackland Base Pvt. George M Bailey, 18. son of Mr. and Mrs R L. Bailey Rt .8, Box 242. Williamston, N. C. has complted his AF basic airmen indoctrination course at Lack land Air Force Base, the ' Gate way to the Aii Force.” Lackland, situated near San An tonio, is the world’s largest air force base, site of Air Force basic training, for men and women, headquarters of the Human Re search Center, and home of AF'c His . '* ' aimng f* n-T: him for entrance ir.t“ Air Force technical training and h r assign ment in specialized work. The course includes a scientific evalu ation of his aptitude and inclina tion for following a particular vo cation and career l rifKimpered Mother (rives Hirtli to Triplets, hatlier 76 —♦ Murfreesboro, Tenn. Three days after giving birth to triplets. Mrs. John Coker. 36. returned to her Oliver Springs (Tenn.) moun- ; tain cabin to can for her other six children. Her husband, 76. is in a local hospital Arthur Smith and the Cracker jacks, radio and recording artists, who will appear at W illiamston High school on Monday, Nov. 5, are nationally known in popular music circles. The group has been featured on many occasions at outstanding banquets and conventions in the Southeast. At their banquet ap pearance they present a program of dreamy dinner.music followed by a lively variety show. The quartet has appeared at such popular night clubs as the Blue Mirror in Washington, the Chaterbox. the Pall Mall Room of the Hotel Raleigh in Washington and were the featured attraction at Loews Capitol Theater in Washington while they were playing there When Ted Malone, ABC’s famous roving reporter and story-teller, was forced to cancel his scheduled appearance at the famed Wilmington Azalea Festi val down on the North Carolina j coast, Arthur Smith and the 1 Crackerjacks took over with a i concert program of popular mu- j sic that delighted the huge crowd. Arthur and the group have ap peared on the same program with Norman Cordon of the Metropoli tan Opera on three different oc casions. These appearances weer at the Wilmington Azalea Festi val. the annual Banquet of the Carolines Press Photographers Association at the Carolina Inn and at the famous 'Singing on the] Mountain’ festivities at Linville, i N. C. ( oal’s Self-Sufficiency Of all the important industrial metals and minerals mined in this country, our self-sufficiency is in-1 creasing m only three' major fields, sulphur, salt, and coal. Iltndad Whiskey, 86 Froof. 40% Whiskey, | 60% Grain Neutral Spirits. | I Austirv^Nichols I 6Co” Inc. I L MOOII'N-NIW >OII J The 1951 Tax Books Are Now Open PAY EARLY AND SAVE DISCOUNT [w M. L. PEEL ft] Martin County Tax Collector s Conservation Of Forests In South I Timber Resource lias Not Always Been Used To licsl Advantage Is Major Problem —<*>— Columbia, S. C,—Paper-making in the South is growing rapidly ‘ with well over $200,000,000 now being poured into expansion and new projects. The increase in the last few years has been enormous. Danger of deforestation in some quarters has aroused new interest in forest conservation and better forestry practices. ! Not much over a year ago i newsprint made from abundant | southern pine began rolling from the $32,000,000 Coosa River News print Company plant near Child ersburg, Ala , with a capacity of 300 tons a day While this was the second enterprise of this kind in the South, the other being at Luf kin, Texas, it was the first new commercial source of newsprint developed in this country in a decade. Now the Bowater Paper Corn pans' of Newfoundland is report ed ready to proceed with a $50, 000,000 newsprint project in the Charleston-Calhoun area of Ten nessee which will have an annual capacity of 125,000 tons of news- j print and 50,000 tons of unbleach ed sulphate pulp. Other Bowater , mills are in England and in Can ada. The Bowater organization has formally requested a certif icate of necessity from the Na jtional Production Authority. Another big paper-making pro- J ject scheduled for the South is a $50,000,000 expansion program by the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company within the next lew years. This company has spent about $55,000,000 already on its six plants since the end of World War II, including about $17,000. 000 on its big installation at North Charleston, S. C„ and the new ex pansion program is to be super imposed upon this. The National Container Cor poration is building a $25,000,000 plant at Valdost.a, Ga. Mengel Company is planning a $20,000,000 paper board mill on the Coosa River at Rome, Ga St Regis Pa pe; Compan,v is building a mill in store for Vulee, Fla. Many large projects have been completed since World War II The rapidly expanding pulD in dustry now employs some 125.000 workers in the South and under existing expansion programs is expected to absorb 10,000 more. This year it is expected the South will produce about 25,000,000 tons or double its 1940 tonnage. The industry has been growing in the South since the 1930’s. Northern mills were rapidly us ing up their stands of spruce when it was discovered that tough wrapping paper could be made from the fast-growing Southern pine. A pine tree grows to proper size in 15 years. While a spruce requires about 60 to replace it-1 self. , Most Southern mills convert j pulp into paper. Southern pro- i duetion of woodpulp, negligible a few daeades ago, now accounts J for about half the nation's total. The advent of the industry has meant more capital investment, more employment and more tax -.rrsTy (.purled I SCHOOL FOR STARLETS! little movie starlets have to go ' back to classes in the schoolhouse ! on their studio lot at the same time other children are picking up theii books again. Two young Wamci Bros, actresses an ' schoolgirls Sherry Jackson and Donna J<| Boyce, wear matching dark cotton plaid frocks trimmed with whilt ■ pique cuffs and collars. revenues for the South. 'J'he pulp producers say that, : with proper forest management, the present acreage will produce enough trees to make possible a considerable expansion in both the pulpwoou and lumber indus tries. The lumbermen are the ones who express the most con- j cern of forest depletion. The pulpwood people say that | the timber crop is only approach j ing a balance with consumption. I Currently the pulp and paper | companies are cooperating in an \ educational program on forest I conservation. The Seaboard Air time Railway, Atlantic Coast Line j and International Paper Company jare only a few of the companies carrying on extensive work in this direction. The region has become great ly conscious of the need of con serving its forests, which makes up over 50 per cent of the land area of the Southeast. This im portant resource has been handled not always wisely in the past and forest maragerheitTrTrftan^artas leaves much to be desired. Lxtensive war needs depleted many stands of trees; fires and insects have taken their toll; un wise cutting practices have been a factor of great consequence. But much educational work is improving the picture. Not long ago it was pointed out bv the Southern Association of Science and Industry that the South has a climate favorable to the rapid growth of trees, a large and sufficient area of woodland and many kinds of trees native to the region but that mismanage ment of more than half of the forest lands keep them from pro ducing moie than a third of ca pacity. The SASI has recommended expansion of a tree-planting pro gram to restore at least 5,000,000 acres of nomestocking and poor ly stocked forest land to pro ductivity within a decade, and also research aimed at developing further methods of growing iini mciude higher standards < 1 train ing in Southern schools of for estry; equitable forest taxation, and a sound policy of public own ership of forests where conditions make private ownership unat tractive. Increased imports to balance ex ports held main U. S. need. Farm Surplus Holdings Are Drastically Reduced -•— » The Government’s investment in surplus farm products un-'-'r farm price-support programs has . been cut almost 60 percent since it reached a record level last year. The investment was.$1,790,000,000 on August 31, compared with a total of $4,200,000,000 early last year. A large volume of the sur plus products has been sold in open market at home or exported to meet increased demands grow ing out of the defense prcgiam. How To Relieve BronchitisT Creomulsion rclie cs promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble tc help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refunded. Creomulsion has stood the test of millions of users. CREOMULSION reliovei Coughs, Chest Colds, Acuto IrMckilia < <3 , KAYBCK if TMlt>’5PtClAI- , i5AI_E" CBOWO KEEPS COMINCll I'M APPAIO /^S5STknow' 'rouwo^fr RtALBweaAiNs HAVE CNOIXiH ] WHCN THCV md CARS TO GO A SEE THEM M i, ABOUND. GREAT WORK. SPCEOY yoltve solo cveby car YO SHOW MYAPPRECt LETS GET MY CAR AMO ILL BLOW YOU TO A SWELL FEED. LUGGING POWER i m 14 I i • ! ...like you never saw before! the great new FERGUSON h 30” Engineers'call it torqueI* You call it lugging power . |the ability of your tractor to keep on going when the job 'gets tougher and tougher. taaTorque in the Ferguson ”30” gives you a Dig edge over ainy other tractor. The big valve-in-head engine provides 'more lugging Power at low eueme^speeds^thanjmany tractors have with the throttle wide open?, * You can set the throttle of the Ferguson "30” at a safe, economical speed and leave it there all day long. You can slow to a creep in heavy going without stalling or shifting gears. You can slow down to cross a headland furrow without stopping or shifting. (And look ot all thoso EXTRAS Ferguson Engineers have given you \ VALVE ROTATORS that keep exhaust raives at top efficiency for hundreds of extra hours to keep service costs low, performance high. . » A NEW AIR-FUEL SYSTEM that delivers I cleaner, cooler air to the engine. This i longer engine life and more work from fuel. BIGGER, HEAVIER GEARS ’ f6r greater durability and looser rear* BETTER LUBRICATION to all vital engine parts. Oil passages to filter are drilled to minimize leakage factor. Floating intake ^ 'skims dean oil and leaves sludge behind. Horizontally mounted filter is easier ti clean and service. BIG BONDED-LINING BRAKES for longer lift ^ safer stops, easier replacement. PRESSURIZED COOLING assures better cool 4 ing under all operating conditions, includ ing high altitudes. SEE TUS FERGUSON "30" TODAY Your Ferguson Dealer will be happy to bring a new Fer^ vuson ”30” to your farm for a personal demonstration of its great power and perform^ ancc its amazing fuel cconomy.*^Teh*ohone a hop* it today, Williamston Tractor And Implement Co. Jamesville Highway Williumeton, N. C. FERGUSON TRACTOR AND DO FERGUSON SYSTEM IMPLEMENTS i
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1951, edition 1
10
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