on Kinston’s u * tes and in 'for alder, atmite de. Mr legislation tendered by jett ipenmlits the MaysviMe sell to order the condemn a of buildings in the rftyUtnlta to further order, their demo. bL lhls btH (Owsef Bill 410) jly extends to iMSayavtlte the » powers granted by General utetoftU toiwns of 5,000 or y ■ mse Bill 681, which ha* pass ' a im q need will be greatly Increased by the opening next fan of Tea chers Memorial School which will serve children living on and east of Heritage Street. This will en, with present to travel over a and connecting mile and a half and connecting roads would almost, cut that dis tance In half, Heard pointed out. Already under construction, Heard reminded it the extension of Bast Daniel Street across the AdHn and -td the old Snow Hill Road, A proper bridge at that point would coot a minimum of fipoo he estimated. The council i^wed to include that Bridge hi the ,45-,6d budget and have It Completed by September first. Prospective Tobacco Acreage Prospective U. S. acreage of flue-cured tobacco la estimated at 905,300 acres, a reduction, of five per cent from the 1,042,200, acres harvested last year. QueenJ3treet between Peyton and 'Vernon Avenues to permit the six-foot widening that has been requested of the State Highway and PubMc Worts, Oammlssion. Heard's estimate of the cost to the city was $3,750 and he re minded that ho trees would have; to be moved and no right-of way would have to be purchased. in tomans at Morris Bloom is- a long way fromhls native home, bat Kin ston has been his home since' 1907, and today as he nears his 61st birthday anniversary on July 14, he is still very much a fixture in the life of the com munity. 1 Bloom was bom many years ago and many thousand miles away in a village -in Southern Russia near Odessa, on thp shores of the Black Sea. The full, rich and' ha<ppy life he has .led has taken him into manv lands 'Twasaf^TEdibkH-" skat tions. JV Before he reached his teens his. lather died and his mother not being able to manage the busi ness left by his father sold out in Southern Russia and went to live with relatives in the north, eastern corner of Russia, in act ually what is part of Poland to day. The city where Young Bloom grew up and learned his trade of boot making was Bialy stok, which was then a frontier town on the PoUsh-Russl&n 'border. As a youth of 12 he went with an older man to KonigSberg (Now Kalingrad) for a two year period In which he worked at his trade and became more pro. flclent in its practice. In 16M, the year iter Alexan der in died apd the leadership of the Russians fell Into the childhood home, Bialysrtok. Dur ing the latter part of that time he supervised a group of 36 bootmakers whose task was to make boots for officers of their division. Bloom recalls now, sixty years later that In over two years he only cut one pair of boots wrong. “They were too short,” he remembers. Then, of course, (Continued from page 5) n This picture taken last Friday afternoon, looting across the • lann of Manley and Henry Gray between Kinston and Trentsn •hews a tttjr Kraetton at the damage that wa* Mat in the Great Dover Swamp by toe o* the won't forest fins of the year to hit Jones County, Finest fire W^deps are beff ftnc an -mm (lose ts in the first three and a frac tion months of 1955 well over a half million acres of North Caro lina timber land has been des troyed or damaged by fire. This is a staggering, expensive loss for a state to suffer that ranks 47th in per capita income in the nation. It is even more staggering to know that a big pact of that vast damage has been done deliberately and with malice. But because of the vastness of the acreas to be protected and the imperfections of the law it is next to impossible to secure a conviction, or for that matter even an indictment against those persons who have committed these gross crimes against the state as a whole, and the land owners in particular. North Carolina has over 49,097, BOO acres of land within Its bor ders and only 5,975,000 acres of that land are under cultivation. If one would be extremely liberal ind allocate another million duction. But the point still remains, that after subtracting any liberal part of the state’s acreage, North C&rolina is still left with ive, what the most of its land in the slow, but profitable production of timber. The tragedy of fire is that it destroys the work of many years and makes difficult any new start on an immediate basis. Forestry and its allied in dustries are not favored with such sudden and dramatic dis plays of power as the tobacco industry, frutin the total, fores try and its- products do contri bute a vast amount to the econo my of North Professionals in the field of forest conservation are today differing on many subjects, and not the least of these is FIRE. The great debate which has not yet broken into the open is, whether to hare controlled fire . to thin un

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