n, 1: JilA Teacher Warning that the answer to the proMem of teasher supply will not be found in 'easy panaceas by low ering certification requirements,' : A. B. Gibson. Legislative Chairman of the NCfiA and former NCEA President, yesterday urged that a 'careful and thoughtful study' of elementary certification be made, v 'More aad better instruction is ' what we need not less and by teachers whose training is mat- ehcd by heir inspiration and ex perience,' Gibson said in an address before the Northwestern NCEA 'District Convention held Friday, November 21, in Winston-Salem. He discussed the possibility of making elementary and primary : teachers out of high schoil teacher pro:ipe:ts, who are currently more numerous Ahan those preparing to teach the lower grades. He pointed ;!ito the difference in temperament, Interest, and specific abilities be- tween those who prefer to teach Wilmington Coca Cola Bottling Company WUmlnttM. N. C, i KEEP WARM 1 1 EBBSidSEBEBEIBBEB WITH HEATERS OF ALL TYPES COAL OIL WOOD ALSO SEE OUR f J. , . - Jt i.r REFRIGATOR AND ELECTRIC RANGES A. C. HALL Hardware WALLACE, N.C. W .TS6m,N0Ti..mc'CyElffAIKI CALILS! I fffVEDV ItlV hA rAAAwnm naHtni MiinAf mrl Rpimatinnal FirePowffl- entrina .iwr " "w ""V""3 outperforms them all ... 180 h.p. faster, safer. And in the beautiful i r f k..rt:fl rt!9Vtl ' 'on non-premium fuel, phis 'tremens , ' new Chrysler you enjoy America . ' . for IM JnOSt beautiful ItiXTmK . dous safety-margin reserve power , ' i smoothest ride . . . over all roadsl ' over designed... for the best-performing, safest car yoo ever drove. Come - America's lUUin ins mu.IT icun SBi 'leader small children and those who pre fer high school work. In an anlysis of the certification requirements for elementary teach ers he listed eighteen hours of pro fessional study. Six hours study of the child, his nature and devel opment; six hours study of the school, its history, organization and purpose; six hoursvstudy of teach ing including classroom manage ment, methods, and practice. 'Who but the most foolhardy would want to, enter upon a teach ing career with less professional training; who would wish to en trust his child to a teacher with less training?' he asked, adding that the academic requirements of elementary teachers are 'for the most part essential elements of a liberal educatbn.' Gbson outlined the legislative program as advanced by the NCEA and listed as the most serious threat to public education the shor tage of qualified teachers, a short age which, he said, has reached beyond the critical and entered the perilous stage. 'We can be certain that when all available teachers are employed and the element of selection has been reduced to the minimum, there are thousands of children in North Carolina who have poor teachers,' he said. 'The NCEA and the United Fore- REMEMBER TODAY TOMORROW WITH A . PHOTOGRAPH KRAFT'S STUDIO Plumes H7-J or " COMMERCIAL PU010GK4PH1 A SPECIALTY IN MOUNT OUf THIS WINTER i I 1 tm.T. 4 rr..'. drive rr... judge it.. .at I 1 1 Uiscmsses' Certification es for Education feel that a sal-' ary schedule of $260044100 for A Certificate teachers, with com parable advances tor other person nel, may well oe a pan or we an swer, though not the. whole an swer,' the speaker continued. "He pointed out "that the inter est which has led to the develop ment of great schools in other fields; such as engineering, den tistry, business, law and medicine, has not been matched in the field of teacher training. Even those in stitutions which have been primar ily associated with teacher training have veered sharply from their, original function. This is reflected in the desire 'not to be designated as teacher training institutions, and in other cases by 4he advocacy of dangerous doctrines In regard to teacher certifieation. The decline of the teacher training function in our colleges and universities is due in part to the fact that the work of teaching has not been glv en its proper place in eur scheme of modern living and that in turn has been due to some large ex tent to economic factors," he con tinued, and added, 'this Is happen ing at a time when the youth of our land in elementary schools and high schools need guidance as nev er before from the best teachers which we can possibly supply." The answer to the problem con fronting public education, accord ing to Gibson, will come 'through an awakening of the people to the place of public education in a Dem ocracy to its essential place in a besieged Democracy.' He urged that industry and education work hand in hand. 'Only if it .is pre served and nourished can free ed ucation remain free.' A liberal is the kind of a person who is willing to spend your mon ey until t Hurts. oooooooooooooooooooooooo GOOD MORNING YOUNG MAN. I HAVE A LITTLE PROBLEM FOR YOU! A.nd you've' come to the right place, we .reply, for there's no auto body problem too. big or small for us. We've the experience, the. ."know-how" to put 'em rolling again, CALL 213-4 S & V Body Shop BEULAVILLE, N. C. Wrecker Service Day Or Night a oooooooooooooooooooooooo m sat svMViMmM J . -.. and lots : ' ;v IUU-TIMI more than you'll find In tay other y you five times greater steering ease a....ri...i Vi.Dnu Mina . ' ,nH aafat.v. Power Brakes stoo vou r ' First Family, . " .QYSL0R for53 WINDSOR t your chrvsier-piymouth deaier'si Sgt. Billie Bland Reluming To U.S.A. (This story mailed from Korea, Oct 29, 1952) - , WITH THE 7TH ' INFANTRY DIV. IN KOREA Sgt. Billie W. Bland of Wallace, N. C., Is return ing to the U. S. from Korea under the rotation program. He served with the 7th Infan try Division, the unit which has seen' action in almost every part of the peninsula since landing at Inchon in September 1950. Sergeant Bland, who entered the Army in July 1950, has served with Company D of the 17th Infantry Regiment more than nine months. He has been awarded the Combat Infantryman Badge for front line duty. Sgt. Robert Page In 'Warm Wind' ALASKA Sgt. Robert G. Page of Wallace, N. C, winds up the fin al phase this week of his participa tion in Exercise Warm Wind, a test of United States Alaskan defenses. The exercise began for him al most a month ago when he was air lifted from Fort Campbell, Ky., to Alaska In the longest military air life on record. Since that time he has been . given cold weather in doctrination and pitted against an enemy "aggressor" force, In real istic, cold weather maneuvers which included a paradrop of more than 300 soldiers from his regi ment. ' POWII ITIIINO gives. ' X .'V NEW YORKER IMPERIAl - t I Me and the old lady fiegered we'd best git rid of our old hens last week since they weren't doin much fer us 'cent eatin up feed. So we cooped up about 50 and took I them over to town. Fannie got out tip at the ten cent store ana I went on out to the processin plant. : Soon as I got my hens unloaded and weighed 1 ambled on in the office to git my check. While I was a settin there waitin for 'em to write It out,. I saw this feller in there In the manager's office a talkin. I knowed I'd seen him be fore but I couldn't quite f igger out when it was. So I askea the giri who was runnin one of them fig gerin machines who he was. ' Soon as she told me It was Ralph Kelly from the Agriculture Department at Raleigh, I knowed right oft Who it was. He's the feller who. looks after the poultry marketing' and, if I'm any judge, he really knows what he's a doin 'too. Pretty soon he come out and was headin toward the office where I was. So I got up and spoke to him and dang if he didn't remem ber me.. I'd been up to his office several months ago. a talkin to him about some broilers and he recog nized me right off and even called me by name. We talked for a little while and I was tryin to git him to go out by our little farm with me, but he said he was so pushed for time 'til be couldn't make it. He told me he was on his way up to Charles Town or some such place in West Virginia to inspect a bunch of turkeys. I asked him what he was goin way up there for and why was be gonna inspect the turkeys. He told me that they was about 9 carloads of North Carolina turk eys up there in a warehouse and thev had been sold to PMA for the School Lunch Program and be'd been ordered to inspect them be fore they was moved out of the warehouse. So I asked mm u tnem was North Carolina turkeys, what in mischief was they doin away up there in West Virginia. ; f Well, this is the story he told me. He said ever one of them tur keys was raised right here in our state;' ever one of 'em was pro cessed here in our state but when they cot that far along witn 'em they weren't no storage space av ailable Here to freeze ana Keep em Wo tiaa martlotoated with ele ments from Air Force, Navy and civil defense units ox Aiassa in rigid exercise to test equipment, supplies and logistical support for arctic fighting. He was fully eq uipped with the latest cold-weather and special clothing. 1 ''''' iV. Sergeant rage, a section coin in Battery B of the 457th Airborne fipW Artillery Battalion, entered the Army in July 1950. V : r DON'T GET CAUGHT COLD WEATHER IS COMING GET YOUR Dure OIL HEATER NOW FROM REATH JONES CASH .STORE IN MT. OL1YB LEI US 0EUVIR YOUR SIEGLER HEATER NOW UTILITY HARDWARE COMPANY . Mt. Olive ' 1 1 1 End Chronic losing I 'Regain Normal : Regularity This AU-Vegetdblo Way I Tlclig4reh drags for cooitipton cn puouh' you " braiJlyl Their "cramp nd griping diirapl nbfmtl bowel action, matey on feel in need of repeated dosirtg. 'Wbtt jou occuioiulljfed &tutipkced, get TtntM but wv relief. Tike Vil Caldr wdl Scant txixdve conttiqed in Syrnpi Pepsin. Xt sH-ttptaMt. No nits, no huf h drags. Dr. Cldwll' contains sa extract of Senna, oldest end One of the finest pstmrtl lazttives known to medicine. - Dr. Calditell't Senna. Luitive tutes good, acts mildly, brings thorough relief amftruilr. Helps you get tegular, ends chronic doting. Even relieve stomach soumeu that coojeipation often brings, Therm Money batk ; If net Mtiaflad AM boMh to Ion 20, . i K-Y, l,N. Y." '''': r ' l KJ until they was sold. , He said this weren't the first bunch that had to be sent out of the state either on account of no place to put era and keep 'em here.. They was was six carloads of our turkeys inspect ed and sold from this same place jest a few. weeks ago, he said. Wow. I ain't one ox tnese Kina who nuts his nose in other people's business, but this was somqthin 1 wanted to know about. So I. asked this feller Kelly what did he fig eer needed to be done to keep from havlh to send our turkeys off somewhere to git them froze and stored.' Well, he had an answer. -The way he put it was that we ought to have a place suitable to store at least five million pounds of turkeys somewhere around the Union and Anson county area be cause they's so hiany turkeys rais ed ud around there and that's where a large part of 'em are pro cessed too. That sounded like a mighty big pile of turkeys to me but when he told me that our three modern turkey processin plants we' got in the state now are a aressin around 125,000 pounds of turkeys a day, I figgered it wouldn't take long toifill up a place that size.. And too it's about like he said, 'We use not to raise as many turs keys in North Carolina as we are now doing. And most or tne ones we did raise were pretty well mar keted around the holiday seasoj. Things are different now. . We are raisin more than a million turkeys in the state this year and the ma jority of this number is processed before the holiday season. Because of this change in. our production and marketing pattern, a greater i need for suitable storage space has , developed.' u It seems to sorta add up to the fact that we've got plenty of tur keys, plenty of processin facilities . i .... our not enougn space w cep uui , turkeys once we git 'em dressed. I wouldn't be scared to bet one thing -though. If this feller Kelly stavs on in marketln work, he and the others a workin with him will sit somethin done about this before too much longer. That man keeps, up with things and He's au tune tryin to nejp out wnere ne can. 1 MORE ACCIDENTS Huntlns accidents - are always more numerous when both the gun and hunter are loaded. '' .' SALES & SERVICE . Your Friendly Fereuson Dealer . Carolina Tractors . Inc. B. SUTTON, MT. UK. OHve Hlhway Phone 498 Goldsboro, N. C, J1 0 x ' II I Llfnffl I rifTim I UUJUJ M . f am- riT tni , jKi , a:. ...j v...j , . t - i . . i- c: a. j -i. business tie lately e-.eJ to m " "" , take i icare of other .people's bust- z ' '; -; ,,.! The (Bureau of the Census report , ' shows that 8.723 bales oT cotton ; ; RED ASH - ' .', were ginned in Duplin County rom . v v , , the crop of W52 prior to Novem- , ; ' ' . . , ; ber 1, 1852 as compared with 3,785 . . 1 BRIQUET - ibales from the crop of 1951. . jBio.r '-::::'. jl ? S2J :; FUEL OIL and li V7 Wie3Q3 KEROSENE ( GEO. P. PRIDGEIl J R- B. VARREll I I I ' ' Phone 2561 . ; P I U IT1 D G I I , Mt. OHve, TUJC. STATE LICENSED oWm PLUMBING MRS. M. M. 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H "NAILS krwcOEN CABINETS 'hdwe. ' CaU WILMINGTON 7747 , f v finnviiic. enne w w it "Everything To Build The Home" "Castle Hayne RdL , ' "Wilmington, N. C. o o o o o o. o, o o o o o o o o o o o o u o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Executor" WALLACE FAISON 3, 1 in. iivilil lusy mi .r:cTci cor:?An W M U Mi T I 11 j , . ui,, lal, ji.ix. f xjf H, V.