Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1951,
Naval Reserves-
ATLANTA, August 9—Detailed
lans for the release of enlisted
\aval Reserves on active duty
have been announced by the Navy
sccording to W. K. Barrett, direc~
tor. State Department of Veterans
Service.
According to Director Barrett
veterans who were not receiving
4rill pay when ordered to active
quty will be separated according
(o the fellowing schedule:
" 1f placed on active duty between
quly 21 and August: 15, 1950 they
ill be separated in QOectober, 1951,
i/ placed on active duty between
August 16 and September 5, 1950,
they will be separated in Novem
per, 1951, : .
1f placed on active duty- be
{ween September 6 and September
17. 1950, they will be separated in
December, 1951. An attempt will
be made to have these men all
separated by December 15.
if placed on active duty be
{ween September 18 and Septem
er 30, 1950, they will be separated
in January, 1952, ‘
1f placed on active duty between
October 1 and October 18, 1950,
they will be separated in Febru
ary, 1952,
if placed on active duty be
tween October 19 ana November 6,
1950, they will be separated in
March, 1952,
If place on active duty between
November 7 and November 30,
950, they will be separated in
April, 1952.
Those who were placed on ac
sive duty during December, 1950
and thereafter will be separated
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ERNEST CRYMES CO.
164 E. Clayion ; - Phone 2726
on the date they complete 17
months of active duty. subsequent
to the Korean operations on June
25, 1950.
. Reserves Serve
' Some Reservists will serve less
than 17 months on active duty un
der the schedule because person
nel losses will be spread out to as
sure fleet readiness and to pre
vent overcrowding of separaticn
centers,
Veterans who were receiving
drill pay when ordered to active
duty will be separated according
to the following schedule:
It placed on active duty be
tween July 21 and July 31, 1950,|
they will be separated in October, |
1951, 3 !
If placed on active duty between !
August 1 and August. 8, 1950, they
will be separated in November,
1951,
If placed on active duty between
August 9 and August 16, 1950,
they will be separated in Decem- |
ber, 1951. These releases will be
made by December 15 in all prac- l
tical cases.
If placed on active duty between |
August 17 and August 24, 1950,|
they will be separated in January,
1952. |
If placed on active duty between
August 25 and August 31, 1950,
they will be separated in Febru
ary, 1952.
If placed on active duty between
September 1 and September 6,
1950, they will be separated in
February, 1952,
If placed on active duty between
September 1 and September 6,
1950, they will be separated in
March, 1952.
If placed on active duty between
September 7 and September 12,
1950, they will be separated in
April, 1952, ‘
If placed on active duty between l
September 13 and September 18,
—m—
-1950, they will be separated in
May, 1952.
If placed on active duty between
September 19 and September 24,
1950, they will be separated in
June, 1952,
If placed on active duty between
September 25 and September 30,
1950, they will be separated in
July, 1952,
October 1950
Thase who were placed on ac
tive duty during October, 1950 and
thereafter will be separated on
the date they complete 22 months
of active duty subsequent to the
start of Korean operations,
Enlisted reservists who are not
veterans but who were receiving
drill pay when ordered to active
duty will be separated after com
pleting 24 months active duty sub
sequent to the start of the war in
Korea. Non-veterans who were
not receiving drill pay when or
dered to active duty will be sepa
rated after serving 22 months fol
lowing the start of the Korean
War,
Barrett invited all persons who
desire additional information con
cerning the date a Navy reservist
may be released from service to
call at the nearest Veterans Serv
ice Office. The local Veterans
Service Office is located at 283%
E. Broad. Manager of the office
is Raymond E. Lester.
CORNY STORY
NEW YORK.— (AP) —lt takes
only 52 kernels of seed corn per
capita in the U. S. to grow the
more than 2,340,000,000 pounds of
corn needed each year to meet the
country’s nearly insatiable appe
tite for canned and frozen varie
ties of the vegetable,
This, the American Can Com
pany noted, is almost four times
the crop of sweet corn grown for
canning 50 years age when it
started in business.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA v
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UNDER. GROUND WATER makes Texas grass ‘grow this way.
brass Grows
Faster Than
Castle Can Eat
HEREFORD, TEX.—Jay Bostonl
figures he takes in about $1,275
a month from a small patch of |
grass on his ranch near here. l
And Pete Carmichael, farmer of
Deaf mith County, says, “It's the
easiest money a man ever made.”
He grazes livestock on an irrigated
pasture of only 20 acres . ‘
That’s just a tiny pasture, out :
here in this panhandle county |
where the average spread runs ¢
1,263 acres. It's big ranch county |,
where wheat and grain sorghums |,
are a basic farm crop. 1
Other Farmers Encouraged i
But outstanding success of lead- |
ing farmers is encouraging others
to irrigate their small pastures |,
from the priceless underground I
water supply. l ]
One of the leaders 1s Boston, | f
who was named top farmer in |1
neighboring Castro County for |}
the past two years. He farmes 840 | ]
acres. But he uses only 20 acres of |
it to graze 85 cattle and 15 hogs. |
Even by eating full-time, thel
livestock can't keep down the I ;
grass. It grows so fast that Boston !
recently had to go out and mow it,
On otuer lirrigated pastures,
grazing- loads of six or seven
steers to the acre sare not un
common, That’s far superior to
the 8 to 10 acres needed for a
cow on native grass.
Sheep man Earl Springer has
an equally amazing small pas
ture. He grazes 40 sheep on 70
acres fenced into six patches.
The stand is a mixture of brome,
orchard and rye grass with some
ladino clover.
Wool Another Bonanza
High wool prices this year gave
Springer an additional bonanza,
He clipped $2,900 worth of wool
tfom the flock.
Springer waters his pasture
frequently—as often as five days
and five nights during the grow
ing season. He also applies
anhydrous amonia fertilizer to
make up a soil deficiency. The
sheep thriving on his 70 acres
would have needed two sections
of land in the old days.
But the old days are long gone.
At the turn of the century, the
entire western half of Deaf Smith
County was part of the XIT Ranch
called “a fence around all out
doors.” The 3,000,000 acre layout
along the western edge of the pan
handle was divided and sold be
fore the owners fully realized what
irrigation water for a thriving
truck garden area meant.
Irrigation plus a special seed
mixture gets Boston his bumper
grass crop. Seed to the acre is five
pounds each of Kentucky No. 21
fescue, brome and orchard grass;
four pounds of rye; two pounds of
hairy vetch; and one pound of
ladino clover, Madrid clover and
alfalfa. ‘
PMA Foots the Bill i
The Production and Marketingl
Administration picks up the bill|
for about two-thirds of the seed
cost. Permanent pastures conserve
soil.
One young farmer using PMA
assistance to develop good farm
ing practices is A. J. Peters. He
grazes 31 cattle on 27 acres di
vided into three pastuves. |
Seed costs were $286. The
PMA paid $5103.80. Peters paid
for planting plus S6OO for fenc
ing the nine-acre plots.
Water is no big cost item for
Peters. He traps run-off water
from his other irrigated land and
| usese it again on the pasture, |
Peters would like to get more
cattle. He believes the pasture
will support three times its pre
sent load. He feels he has found
the most profitable, the quickest
and the easiest way to produce
bee.f After his cattle got in the
pasture this year they grew right
up.n
“Most of them you wouldn't
know it was the same cattle.”
Camp Ouf During
w '
eek-End Trip
More than 50 Georgia school
teachers, students at the Universi
ty of Georgia for the summer,
are going camping this weekend
so they can direct camping trips
lfor Georgia school children next
year.
The week-end trip to Camp Ray
on Lake Burton is part of a course
in resource-use education at the
University.
l The course, directed by Miss Re~
{ ba Burham, is one “in education
\for the emprovement of living
i through the wise use of resources.”
Camping trips, she says, are among
PAGE SEVEN
the best ways to teach the proper
use of resources. syz 1,571
l The outing willl be organized as
a master copy for trips for Georgia
elementary and high school stu
dents. Camping trips are eontem
plated as a part of an extended
: school program for the summer
months.
The trip to Camp Ray will be di
rected by experts in forestry, soils,
and wildlife who will conduct side
trips and lecture demonstrations
on the proper use of these natural
resources.
Among the camp directors will
be Dr. Richard L. Weaver, state
department of public institutions,
Raleigh, N. C.; Mr. J. W. Burdette,
regional soil conservation office,
! Spartanburg, S. C.; Mr. E. H.
Thomas, University agricultural
extension service; Mr. Jack Ben
nett, 'soil conservation service,
Gainesville; Mr. James H. Jenkins,
| University School of Ferestry; and
er. Olie Burtz, Georgia Forestry
l Commission.
| NATIONALIZATION
_OPPOSED IN BUKMA
| RANGOON.—(AP)—The “Ba
ma Khit,” a leading Burmese lan~
guage newspaper, has editorially
opposed the socialist government's
nationalization plans, asserting
nationalization is alien to the Bur=
mese.
The paper considered Burma's
social, religious and economicsl
| environment are factors against
lnationa]izatiOn which, it says, to
be effective presupposes dictator=
lial methods in its application.
| The paper warned that nation
i alization, if forced upon the coun
| try, will bring only misery and
idissatisi’action to the people.
Fushun, Manchuria, has two
I Japanese-built shale ofl extrac
tion plants.