MAy6E IdMOVER DOING IT, MOM, botconumirouc WILL HELP US MEET 0(*I945GOALS. Soldiers fighting in trenches and foxholes on foreign soils may not be interests in the contour of the land, but formers back home find ■ contoured “trenches” pay dividends In food and fiber needled for vic tory. Conservation practices carried out in the past 10 years have done a great deal toward increasing per acre yields on North Carolina farms, and/cointour farming is one of the modern conservation methods which will help farmers meet their flood production goals this year. BLUE MOLD IS SPREADING OVER SOUTHERN GEORGIA Demands for All Kinds of Materials Are Developing Howard R. Garris's, Extension «plant pathologist at N. C. State ■‘College, announces that Georgia :has a widespread development of iblue mold on tobacco, far more • than usual for this season of the year. He says that no one cpn pre dict how serious the trouble will be in North Carolina but urges all tobacco growers to ba on their 4gulatr