IP PAGE 10 Sanford 0 Program' ] TEACHEY ? Governor Sar ford Wednesday outlined bold blueprint for p u b 1 i school progress, and emphasia ed, "the plan is worth th< money." Sanford said, "We canno know for several weeks exact ly how much money we wil have available in the budget t be adopted in the spring, al though I suspect it is no "nmiph " He repeated his campaigi pledge that he would "havi the courage" to recommenr new taxes to the General As sembly should revenues fal short. Sanford termed his addres; "A Call to Arms." He said "It is time for North Caro linians to march?to start oui march from the forefront o: the South to the forefront o: the "nation." The governor, who based hi: political campaign last year or Tar Ileel education, sounder: the call at a meeting of Dis trict Five of the State Schoo Boards Association at thi? small Duplin County town. He said, "Our program i: summarized as one which pro vides educational opportunity appropriate and available, sec ond to none in quality, for all the children of our state, prop erly supported." He called ii a four-star program." Sanford called for school consolidation wherever possi hie. He said, "I accept Dr James Bryant Conant's stand ard that a high school with a graduating class of less thar 100 is too small to be eithei FOR THE BEST FURNITURE VALUES IN TOWN SEE US SATTERWHITES HENDERSON, N. C. FOR COMPLETE PLUMBING ? A CONTACT BRUCE Telephone 987 ? or coi rt ij_ uaiKs oei Highway 158 THE HEART OF EVERY 1 | UNSURPASSI IN DIFFIC _ RCAV 'tl*^ mltewn "Itew Vista" T N?w VI?>gTu??r wiHi mp to 43% m ; SL!^uS? a KA ? ?* , '?L?dc2Ll* I Cm B. Miller _ Warren ton, utlines 'Foil For N. C. E i- appropriate in scope or adea quate in quality, c j "Community pride is an adi mirable trait, but it should not e' get in the way of quality eduI cation for the children of the t J community. We are moving j in the right direction across 1 North Carolina. and local 0 school boards should give careI ful attention to Consolidation, t. where possible, to achieve j quality and an adequate range 1 or course." _ s Sanford also said school i I construction should remain es-; -1 sentially a county responsibil1 ity. But in order' to get the most for the building dollar, s he asked that buildings be . standardized to a "reasonable - degree," and that a limit be r placed on the amount which f can be spent per square foot. | ^ He said, "The state will have to provide some matching1 s funds for the next immediate J period which will see an un* usual influx of students." j Sanford said the program was up to the State Board of * Education, Department of Public Instruction, local school ! boards, school personnel and parents to execute. He said it was up to the General Assembly, county and city officials, "or in other words, the entire citizenry" to support. The legislature convenes in Raleigh next week. Sanford said, "There is no easy road; there is no clearlymarked road; there is no sure , road, but I do have some ( landmarks which will lead us . onward. He said: j "We need to attract able people to the teaching profesI sion and keep them there ' once they have become good teachers. We need to make | salaries for teachers competiI tive. Over the next ten years t we must increase salaries un. til we can draw and keep an i adequate number of quality I teachers." J He called for strengthening of teacher education, addition j of professional help for teachers, improvement of the classND ? HEATING | GA TUNG -6 ? Warrenton itact at ? Ticc Station Warrenton rv SET IS THE TUNER... >W ! :D TV RECEPTIC ULT SIGNAI flATAA nuiuK and specie! high up to 45% mor * before ... dra able TV more dependsb A _ in difficult sigiu $239.95 q ^ WARW^TO^^ North Carolina ir-Star ducation j room teaching-learning situa! tion. | Explaining the latter point, ihe said: | "The teacher must be given j time to teach; the pupil must; I be given time to learn; class' ; size must be reduced; the special services and teaching tools ... must be improved; libraries, the center of the school's | instructional program. have been neglected in too many [schools, and this requires nnr immediate attention." [ He said students must be given the help needed to folI low successfully the right [ course. He called for constant study of school performance as "some assurance of achieving quality and excellence." Sanford said. "We need to support our schools, and this i means everbody must support j them. We need to support them with money, with under-1 standing, with encouragement. I with determination that we are ! entitled to the best and that j we have the capacity and resources to obtain the best." j The governor continued. "The taxpayers have been gett-, ing their money's worth in! North Carolina. The trouble j is that we haven't been buy- j ing enough. I have already j pointed out that money alone will not do the job. but we > cannot do the job without money." Appropriateness. S a n fo r d ; said, "means we seek education which meets state and national needs, along with and as a part of the needs of the -individual." "It recognizes that individual talents vary, that a total school program must fill the needs of each child, and that individuality must ' not be crushed in a common mold." He also called for basic education in English, math, the humanities, elementary sciences, social sciences, foreign languages, physical education and health, vocational courses, special challenges for the gifted and special training for the handicapped. VETERANS (Continued from page 1) pendents, and those who advise and counsel with them, are urged to get this report to my office now. Waiting until the last dav of January to submit the report is uselessly! subjecting the payments to | the danger of being stopped " j "The veterans and widows! receiving these payments might' face a hardship if the payment' is stopped." DcRamus continued \ "To insure that the payments | are continued requires a very j simple action?return the rc-; port NOW!" Economists estimate that in the next 5 years the number of farm workers will decline between 750,000 and 1,000,000. w )N L AREAS! TV WITH V VISTA UNER w, you can have a clearer, sharper, i from hard-to-get., .from far-away RCA Victor TV featuring the exa Tuner I TVs newest, most powerlutionary new RCA Nuvistor tube -gain circuitry combine to give you e picture pulling power than ever matically improved reception ... to all-round TV performance ... A areas) ^ X mm tax uNTER r 1 ? J. Allan Tucker a- T" 'y THE WARREN RECORD Sausage Wheels For Breakfast m|f 3 " v Kvervone needs that ' extra little something" to get going In the morning! You'll tempt the most languid appetite if you prepare simple foods in a new fashion. Sausage Wheels served with pineapple juice, ready-to-eat cereal and scrambled eggs are the makings of a top-notch breakfast. Because Sausage Wheels are a biscuit-meat combination, they add both appeal and good nutrition to the menu. This attractive and tasty breakfast dish made with enriched self-rising flour offers calcium, food iron and three B-vitamins to benefit your family's health. You make your breakfast biscuit baking easy. too. when you use enriched self-rising flour. Baking powder ' and salt have already been blehdea with self-rising flour to save you time and energy. To make Sausage Wheels for breakfast, first brown the I sausage. While the meat is cooking, mix the biscuit dough, then follow the recipe directions for combining the two to make j crusty, golden biscuit wheels. While the biscuits are baking, prepare and set out the other breakfast foods. Here's the time- ! saving Sausage Wheel recipe that makes this hearty breakfast possible. SAUSAGE WHF.EI.S 1 pound porl. sausage meat \\ cup shortening or salad oil* 2 cups sifted enriched self- J.j to cup milk rising flour Cook sausage in skillet until all red color disappears Do not brown. Drain off as much fat as possible. Measure flour into mixing bowl. Cut or rub in shortening. Add milk to make a soft dough (*If salad oil or sausage fat is used, add it with the milk.) Turn out on lightly floured board or pastry cloth and knead gently 30 seconds. Roll out to rectangle about 8x12 Inches. Scatter cooked' sausage meat evenly over dough. Roll up like jelly roll. [ Cut into 1-lnch slices and place on ungreased baking sheet. Bake | in hot oven (425?F.) until lightly browned about 15 to 20 minutes. Mikes 12 Sausage Wheels. Belk Foundation To Award lit $500 College Scholarships For 1961 S. A. Warlick. Jr., Manager, stitutions, as well as numerous Leggett's Department Store an- individuals, have benefited nounced this week that the from the Foundation. The Belk Foundation will award Scholarship program is anotheighteen $500 college scholar- er step in assisting others to ships for 1961. He said this is a better opportunity in life, a fifty per cent increase over The scholarships will be1 last year's program. The awarded by a special Scholarawards will be made to high ship Committee based on the school graduates who expect applicant's scholastic rating, to enter college as freshmen school and community actividuring the year. ties, overall merit, character Warlick pointed out that this and interests, and potentialities is a continuation of the Foun- for success in college and postdation's recognition of the college life. Winners will be growing value of a college edu- free to select their own colcation and the Foundation's lege and course of study, desire to assist those who are All local high school seniors deserving and need assistance, who are interested in applying The Belk Foundation was for one of these scholarships established in memory of Dr. | are asked to contact S. A. WarJohn Belk and Mr. W. H. Belk. I lick. Jr.. for addional dAtnlls Sr During the years since'its j and to go by Leggett's Departbeginning many churches, col-|ment Store to pick up an aplcges, hospitals, and other in- plication blank. Survey Shows South Changing Cotton Production Practices If present trends continue, mated 5,000 acres of cotton one-half the cotton acreage in were treated with pre-emerthe Southeastern United States gence herbicides in North Carowill be mechanically harvested lina. This figure increased to within the next few years. 10,000 acres in 1959 and 35,This prediction comes from 000 in 1960. Upchurch predicts R. P. Upchurch, an associate that 52,000 acres will be treatprofessor of field crops at in 1961. North Carolina State College. Mechanical harvesting is fol7'pchurch bases his predic- lowing closely the pattern set tion on a recent survey made by pre-emergence weed conof Chemkal weed control and trol ,n 1959 thc firJt mechanical harvesting trends ... _ .. ,. in some of the important cot- ,hat estlma,es are "ailable, ton producing states. It is the * Per cent ?* North Carolina's first attempt to show belt-wide c?tt?n acreage was mechanicaltrends on these practices. Re- harvested. In 1960, the figsulsts of his -survey were re- ure jumped 12 per cent. Upported to the recent Cotton church expects 16 per cent Production and Mechanization Conference at Greenville. S. C. I Upchurch found that the * Southeastern cotton states of Attend The North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama are fol- ^ lowing a trend set earlier by MB H the Delta H flH H In 1956. less than 10 per H V cent of the cotton acreage in H the Delta states of Louisiana, W * Mississippi, Arkansas and Tennessee was treated with pre- 1 emergence herbicides. By 1960, fm IB#!! k however, 65 per cent of the wtl I B# m\mJ m acreage in Louisiana was treated And by 1963 or 1964, Upchurch predicts that 75 per February 4th *r cent of the acreage in the entire area #111 be treated. ^ ? m "The full benefit of using |tAC|| labor - saving pre - emergence m wHOll treatments cannot be realised unless mechanical harvesting is also adopted," Upchurch 1 MUSIC BY . .? . pointed out. **. . It seems 1 reasonable to predict that by "THE E 1983 or 1964 the Delta states | * * . . . will also be ntdimkiHy harvesting about 79 per cent of ^Ujeir cofton acreage," he > SPONSOR! XTpchurch believes the southeastern states are ranaiaf abort fow yeara behind the IN Or lilt* Junior Delta states ***** ^ ** ** naeaaia Used Per MM b UN, for sample, an asU WammtM, Nwtk Mayor Issues Boy Scout Week Proclamation Warrenton Mapor W. A. Miles has proclaimed the week of February 7 to February 13 as Boy Scout Week here. In making a proclamation here this week, the mayor urged the observance of the week, which begins on the fifty-first anniversary of the founding of the Boy Scouts of America. m issuing me prociamauon, the Warrenton mayor said: "Whereas, February 8, 1961, is thn an^iwrc^ry f|f the founding of the Boy Scouts of America, chartered by the Congress of the United States of America as a program for all boys, and Whereas, the Boy Scout program has affected the lives of over 33,000,000 boys and men since 1910, and now has an active enrollment of more than 5,100,000, of whom 25,000 are active locally within the Oc coneechee Council, and 1304 within the Vanwarco District, and Whereas, the movement seeks to train more of our youth in character and qualities of good citizenship, now therefore, be it Resolved that I W. A. Miles. Jr., mayor of the city of Warrenton, in the State of North Carolina, do hereby proclaim the week of February 7 to 13 as Boy Scout Week and acclaim its theme, "Strenghten America . . Character Counts." I do urge our citizens to recognize and support the unselfish patriotic service rendered to our community by the volunteer leaders who give generously of their time, their efforts, and their energy to the benefit of the youth of our : community; and also the as sistance given by religious bodies, school organizations, Veterans association^, fraternal j groups, and service clubs that sponsor our Cub Scout packs. Boy Scout Troops, and Explorer units. v In Testimony Whereof I nave hereunto signed my name officially and caused the seal of the city of Warrenton to be affixed, this 1st day of February. 1961. W. A. MILES. Mayor. COURT (Continued from page 1) Hargrove et als vs. Lillie Daniels, et als; T. E. Stegall vs. Willie Robinson and M. P. Stewart; R. S. Duffell, T/A Duffel Electric vs. Herbert King and Lillie King; N. B. Mustian vs. Cary Wilson; Annie Staton Comer Lakey vs. Robert C. Comer. Alice P. Southerland vs. C. F Ilagan and Nettie T. Hagan; i Edward Cooke vs. Commission of North Carolina's cotton acreage to be mechanically har-; vested in 1961. About *f) per cent of the j Alabama and South Carolina < cotton crops were mechanically harvested in 1960. Georgia led the region, however, with 30 per cent mechanically harvested Georgia is expected to stay ahead of her neighbors by reaching the 50 per cent mark in 1961. In reporting his study. Upchurch explained that his figures "are no more than the educated guesses" of individuals in states covered. But he expressed confidence that the "guesses" are reliable enough 1 to show basic trend*. Semi-Formal ICE IY NIGHT ? Nor Una Gym PRIZES 1EBELS" , ' *1.M PER TICKET CO BT THE Woman's Club Carolina FRIDA Slim Chance Seen j For Drastic Farm Change In Congress J WASHINGTON ? D e m o- I crats and Republicans who 1 steered farm legislation In 1 Congress in recent years had r this advice today for the Kennedy admistration: Build on I existing farm programs. I The legislators saw little s chance in Congress for any t drastic farm proposals. 1 | i ne aavice comes oeiore tne new administration gets down I to drafting the farm proposals I President Kennedy will submit I to Congress within the next j two weeks. A three-member task force t committee?on?"the?key?ele- 4 ments of the agricultural sit| uation" handed the new ad- t ministration its farm program li recommendations Tuesday, e They came closer, in some respects, to meeting promises of f the Republicans rather than n v er of M~.tor Vehicles: William L. Stevenson vs. John A. Rich- ! ardson: Mildred Merrill vs. !; John Q. Merrill: Zollie C. Har- f ris vs. Willie M. Harris; Leonard L. Paynter vs. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. Enoch Green vs. Commission- t er of Motor Vehicles; lX)uise t Y. Rivers vs. Richard C. Rivers: L. A . Kilian vs. A1 C. Graff: Perry M. Pernell vs. Percy | g Davis; Joe Norman vs. Mary i %, U Mnl-man. T an -,.o I ... .w..uuuiv...a ' Commissioner of Motor Vehicles; Economy Auto Supply n Company vs. Pauline Burnette; s J. E. Daniel, vs. Bettie M. s Solomon; Luther Peter Collins vs. Edward Scheidt, Com. of ^ Motor Vehicles; Mamie Ker- t sey vs. Thomas William Kersey; Warren County vs. Mary Falcon, et als. 1 Warren County vs. Norlina Building & Loan Association; Warren County vs. Pompey Williams, et als: State of N. C. ex rel Lottie Snipes- vs. Frank Johnson & Williemia West; F. L. Hicks vs. Dixie Wood Products, Inc.; Louis Novel Towns,- Jr.. & Mary Christmas Towns vs. Commis- g sioner of Motor Vehicles; * George S. Sinn vs. "Ruth H. Riggan; Ernest Macklin vs. Carrie Louise Bullock Macklin; Mabel C. Lashmit vs. Spenjcer Lashmit; Edward Cornelius Dunston vs. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles; Clevenia A. Alston St Wilbur D. Alston vs. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles; James Howard Reid, Jr., by next friend, James .Howard Reid, Sr. vs. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles; Nancy Towns vs. Commisser of Motor Vehicles; Bunns Mobil Service vs. Mrs. P. E. Bumettc; Alex West. Jr. vs. N. C. Department of Motor Vehicles; and William Horace Perkinson vs. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. Judge Hall ordered the case 4 of Joseph H. Henderson, Jr., Annie Mae Henderson and Deloris Henderson remanded to juvenile court. I WARREN WARRENTON, N. C. SUNDAY - MONC Dynamic In Concept! G IKSIMB KaKtaMta lMRI Sunday Show* 3:00 Matin** 3:15 WED. - THURS si mf* " #. '; -,' \ Matinee 3:IS Y, FEBRUARY A 1961 1 >f the Democrats in the 1900 1 -ampaign. The committee opposed inireases in price supports for uajor commodities and vx-f- 9 >ressed the view that farmers rould be unlikely to support igid farm production control neasures. Kennedy's campaign farm s . irogram and the Democratic I >latform favored higher price upports and measures to con- M rol farm production and to lalt surplus output uir< ur\ir k v niun tt/\ i (Continued from page 1) Granville County topped the ist in fatalities with three, hree personal injuries, and 31 gift in property During January Vance Couny had no fatalities and eight njuries with property damage stimated at $14,445. Franklin County had one atality and 13 injuries for the nonth. while property damage vas estimated at $3,120. There were 61 accidents in 11 throughout the district in anuary, Sgt. Cook said. Some'4' 3 of these accidents occurred n Warren County. The Reason Aiter partaking of a meal in y he small hole-in-the-wall resaurant, the patron asked to ee the manager. "I just want to tell you," he aid, "that I think you must lave an exceedingly clean ;itchen." "Thank you," beamed the nanager, "b t what makes you ay that? Why, you haven't een our kitchen." "Because," said the patron, leading for the door, "everyhing tastes like soap." Say you saw it advertised in rhe Warren Record. SEWING MACHINES, GUARANTEED BY GOOD HOUSEKEEPING We Service Any Make Sewing Machine I ALLEN L. KING Warren Record Office WARRENTON. N. C 303-1 PHONE 4964 THEATRE I TEL. 318-1 AY - TUESDAY igantic In Production 1 fc WE EARGEST CAST EVER USER . a MANY MOTION PtCTUMI " miL HMt* *tin. W.nM Night 7fOO . 9:00 I Night 7:00 9:00 +**X* 'I BJOJif fB|i3 ' Kifht 7?00 - ?tl0