productive and housing developments going up. And' he is convinced that North Carolina has plenty room for them, as well as for'agriculture. But he is concerned about urban developments on choice agricultural land while less valuable land around them remains undeveloped. Superhighways require 60 to 70 acres of lqh(l per' mile. This is -equal to the acreage found in an average North Carolina farm. - Nationally, about 1,000,000 acres of productive farmland are'being diverted each year to nonagricul tural uses.' In the past 15 years, the Atlantic Seaboard states from Virginia to Maine have lost from 10 to 25 per cent of their cultivable land to city developments. .Usually, it is the good, durable farmland .that makes the best build ing sites. X,evel farmland in lower' construction costs, troft>le*£me drainage and'.. r for runways. ’ ' c While productive farmland is be ing put to other uses, the' popula tion of North Carolina and the Uqhed .States continues to cliipb rapidly. "Each 30, days enough people are added to the United States to pop ulate a city the size of Raleigh, Asheville, Greenville, Lumbertoh, and Rocky Mount combined,” Doggett said. “By 1966 or 1967, the population of North Carolina is expected to reach 5,000,000. In 1800, the popula tion of the e&tire United States . -was only 5,300,000. , In order, to help assure that this \ growing population ean be ade quately fed. along with having their other land use requirements met, Doggett pointed otat that tlie, Soil Conservation S.erVice. is preparing soil-use jha^gv ' Some cities; and countie.s are em ploying a soil scientist' to assist . their, planning boards* ind cdtnnfls sions. In ihahy-places Ste problerft ■■ i ... .. ..if.1.. HV'.I Considering the number of ma jor legislative proposals that have confronted the 87th Congrem in my; judgment this has been the hard est working Congress in which I have served since I came to the Sedate. * " ' ^ ' h The Congressional Record on May 1 gave a . review of Congres of non-farm use of farmland is being attacked by a committee composed of representatives of ag riculture, industry, city and county government. s sional activity for this session. It reported as of that date that 3,900 Congressional measures had been introduced, that 313, measures had been reported to the Senate, that . 248 measures had ppssed the\ Sen ate, and that 79 private Bills and 45 public bills had been enacted into law. Ibis hardly tells the story of' Congress in action, however. For months now Congressional, commit tees have been working long- hours On the Farm Bill, the Tax Revis,* ion Bill, 1 the .Trade Expansion Act) of 1962, and the proposed Foreign Assistance Act of 1962. , As these are "marked-up” for consideration by the two houses, Congressional Activity will begin to move at it fast stodrfurkH^ . I N. C. Social Security t Secretary jtibicoff 6f the Health, Education, and Welfare Depart ment informed me .on April 28th that North Carolina had 366,961 people who received old-age, survi vors, and disability insurance monthly benefits as of the end of December 1961. FREE! Bottles or Tartks Furnished H/l f:. f at "C ►' m 1Y1C( ell lU i 111 For the calendar year 1961 North Carolinians received more than $229 million as a result of these benefits. December 1961 payments alone totaled more than $19 mil y"L(' (". ^v*r, ' v N. C. Iwarw Units ’ Eleven North Carolina Reserve Army units which were called into on from th« Der |^Thwe ,units 1 ^Winston-Salem, . WHAT COULD BE A LASTING GIFT THAN . . . JEWELRY — We Have A Pin# Selection — - INGS-NECKLACES GIVE A LASTING GIFT — GIVE JEWELRY, , FROM J. A. Whitfield JEWELER "Your House of Diamonds" ' 403 N. Queen St. — Kinston, N. C. AUTO fe'Sws',' * bdfjdtffaVMVMj