Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / May 26, 1967, edition 1 / Page 8
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^ ~ T n I 1' 'mm: Man's Pollution Of Air And Water Offers Danger To n ft 1 Mr. Wallace, a resident of Chapel HOI, la Assistant Pro fessor of social Studies at N. C. State. The following piece, entitled "Tour Faithful and Obedient Servant," originally appeared In Southern Engineer a quarterly publication at the N. C. State School at Engineer ing. By JAMES C. WALLACE As we enter upon the last third of the Twentieth Century, It can be predicted with con fidence that a new wave of optimistic forecasts con cerning the future will soon be upon us. "Man on the Moon by 1970. On Mars before 2000." "A Gross National Product of $850,000,000,000 by 197a" "A Population of 400,000, 000 by 2000." Double the per capita In come by 1990." "Feed the World through America's Miracle Agricul ture." Such statements as these have already been made by -??arlous "experts," and we can expect to hear still more of them In the coming years. All the statements have two things in common: they as sume an endless, upward pro gression in human affairs through the utilization of tech nology, and they affirm, to borrow the motto of a well known company, that "Pro gress is Our Most Important Product." There is another, a much darker side to this shiny coin. It is a side which is not usually discussed by the partisans of blind "Pro gress," and if it Is men tioned at all, it is usually dis missed as being just another problem which will be solved tn the course of time. I re fer to the destruction of our environment, a destruction planetary in scope, which is now taking place. The sense less waste of resources, the Fouling of air and water, the jgly and primitive rape of the countryside; these are the real -and fateful?costs of our lighly - advertised "Pro gress." And, unless we turn >ur total attention to these losts, unless we alter our ap proach and our direction, and mless' these things are done., won, it is clear that the "Pro press" about which we so )roudly speak will shortly Missionary Circles Meet Next Week Missionary Circles of the Norlina Baptist Church will J meet next week as follows: The Lola-Sue Circle will meet Monday at 3 p. m. at the home of Mrs. R. H. Full er. The Annie Armstrong Cir cle will meet Monday at 8 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Jean Williams. The Olga Hood Circle will meet Monday at 8 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Marshall Flem ing. The Margaret Mitchell Cir cle will meet Tuesday at 10 a. m. at the home of Mrs. Maggie Adcock. Hostess To Jerusalem Society The Jerusalem Society of Christian Service held its May meeting In the home of Mrs. Ava Sammons. In absence of the president, Mrs. Rachel King presided. Mrs. Van Coleman gave the devotion. Mrs. Sammons had charge of the program, "Com plusive Conformity, Christian Values," with several ladles taking part. The hostess served ham biscuits, strawberry short cake and coffee. The June meeting will be held In the home of Mrs. Ida Bolton. Mrs. H. E. Coleman ERterf?RS Club Mrs. H. E. Coleman enter tained the Wise Bridge Club on last Wednesday afternoon at her hone which was deco rated with lovely rosea. lira. Joe Held was present ed the high score prize and | Mrs. J. W.Perry woo thebta?o prize. The hostess served lee come to an end. Is this another Jeremiah talking? Or, perhaps, a Cas sandra? The answer Is "do" to both questions. Rather, It Is a person who Is Impress ed by facts and figures at the very hardest, most scientific kind. Let us consider some of those facts.: ?We are dumping 133,000, 000 tons of pollutants Into the American atmosphere each year. ?We dump 2.5 billion pounds of garbage in the Unit ed States each year. This is 1,600 pounds per person. ?The garbage includes at least 48 billion cans, or 250 per person. ?26 billion bottles and 25 million tons of waste paper are piled up every year. ?About 1,940 cities in the United States have combined sewers, carrying both raw sewage and rain water, which serve about 59,000,000people. These sewers flush about 65 billion gallons of raw sewage annually Into the nation's watercourses. ?The Great Bald Eagle, symbol of the United States, Ls becoming sterile. He is a victim of eating game and fish which contain traces of DDT. The blue shell crab night well become extinct be :ause of similar contamina ilon. ?North Carolina is import ing oysters from Louisiana! 3ur oyster, clam and scallop justness is being critically iamaged by a combination of pollution, dredging, channeli zation and spraying. ?Along the banks of the Col orado lie snow white dunes, nany of them weighing mil lions of tons, which are piles rf uranium tailings left over ifter the U-235 had been pro cessed out of the ore. These wastes contain radium-226, with a half-life of 1,600 years, md the thorium-230, with a lalf-life of 80,000 years. As he piles erode, the radlo ictlve materials enter the ?iver and move down-stream, h the Lake Powell and Lake idead reservoirs concentra tions of radium-226 have been letected, concentrations In >xcess of maximum permissi >le levels. ?The Great Lakes consti tute a large percentage of the world's entire fresh water supply. Lake Erie, the shal lowest of the Lakes, Is near lng Its biological death. Only a chemical tank will be left unless massive efforts are soon made to save it. Detroit alone pours 1.5 billion gal lons of waste each day into the Detroit River which flows directly into Lake Erie. The Cuyahoga River, flowing through Akron and Cleveland, and then emptying Into the Lake, is so clogged with de bris ? old tires, flammable chemicals, logs and rotting pilings?that it has been label ed a fire hazard. Some 87 tons of phosphate are dump ed into the Lake each day, serving to produce thousands of tons of slime, green and blue-green algae which In de caying, deprive the water of Its dissolved oxygen. Last year, 2,600 square miles of the Lake?over or.e-fourth of Its area?had been largely de oxygenated. ?At the foot of Niagara Falls, when viewed from the bridge frequented by honey mooners, dark eddies of brown, stinking sludge can be seen. ?When the Well and Canal, by-passing the Falls, was cut in 1932, the object In view was the facilitation of shipping, all the way from the Atlantic to Duluth. The Canal also fa cilltated the entry into the Lakes of the sea lamprey, a type of eel. The lamprey has now spread throughout the Lakes and has destroyed large quantities of the desir able fish (The lamprey at taches itself to a trout, bores a hole Into It and sucks out Its body Juices.) ?It is estimated that It will require at least $100, 000,000,000 to clean oar ?iiibt - fnl U they can ever be re stored to their original purity. -? Is estimated that the chances at a man's dying be tween the ages of 50 and 70 from respiratory disease are twice as great If he lives where the air is pollute than If he lives wtaere the air is clean. -Phosphate plants In Flor ftfci have damaged the citrus crops over a radius at 80 by as much as 75 per Gaseous Ooortodee, ab ' by the grass sal in - by cattle, have caused a large fallinf-ott In the area' * many other states, has no all pollution Uvs. -There are 39 lung-cancei deaths par 100,000 in rural araas and 52 In cities. The cancer-death rataa are pro portional to the size of the city. So Is the amount ci air pollution. ?Deaths by lung-cancer, and complications due to bron chitis, asthma and emphysema have skyrocketed during the past several years, apparent ly keeping pace with air pol lution. ?5.3 million automobiles will become Junk this year. Six years ago, the figure was 4.2 million. ?During the next decade, we will produce 60 million junk cars. The whole automotive Industry will face collapse unless that many cars are Junked by 1976, or sooner. ?We are strip-mining our mountains, spreading ugli ness, erosion and unpre cedented siltatlon. The mountainous slag-pile which recently destroyed a whole generation of children in a Wales village has its many counter - parts in West Vir ginia and Kentucky. They con stitute booby-traps for thefu-" ture, while most of those who profited from them are dead and in their graves. -We have built a steel mill in the Indiana Sand Dunes, thus damaging a priceless geological treasure. ?We are planning a high way through the California Redwoods. ? It has been proposed that 530-foot high dam be built on the Yukon River. It would create a lake 280 miles long and 80 miles wide. It would x>st $1,300,000,000 and would: limlnlsh the annual salmon latch by at least 200,000 fish and destroy 2,400,000 acres of luck breeding habitat. It would lestroy the range for thou sands of moose and it would :otally eliminate the habitat for a substantial percentage if the Alaskan fur crop. ?It has been proposed that two dams be built In the Grand Canyon and conservation torces are fighting for their lives against this desecra-, tion of the greatest single geological phenomenon on the planet. ?Between 1860 and 1960 the carbon dioxide content of the earth's atmosphere In creased by nearly 14 per cent. It Is well known that C02 produces a "greenhouse ef-_ feet" by limiting the radiation of incoming sunlight. Such a large extra quantity of heat might be sufficient to melt the Antarctic ice cap and thereby raise the' seas of the world by as much as 400 feet. Assuming the process would take 1000 years, the seas would rise 4 feet every ten years or 40 feet per cen tury. It is clear that such a global catastrophe as this could not have been foreseen from the beginning of the In dustrial Revolution. Like so many of the problems now be fore us, it is possible to see the difficulty only in retro spect. But, once having seen the undeslreable consequence of our well-intentioned action, we should never hesitate to act in order to prevent fur ther aggrevatioa of the prob lem. No one foresaw, for ex ample, the great November, 1965, electrical blackout. Will It happen again? No one both ered to test Thalidomide on pregnant women for the full length of their pregnan cies. Will such a thing hap pen again? What are the long range effects of the intro duction, in 1923, of tetra ethyl lead as a gasoline ad ditive? Who could have fore seen the incredibly wide spread diffusion of lead throughout the world? The highly toxic effects of lead are well-known. Will Its use now be curtailed? ?The total explosive power of nuclear tests between 1948 and 1982 was equal to 500 mil lion tons of TNT, about 200 times the power of all the bombs dropped on Germany In World War IL The amount of strontium 90, done, which was released Into the environ ment equalled one billion grama at radium. By compar ison, before World War n, tbe World supply of Radium was ^proximately io grama. After several rears of down grading the effects of fall out, the A EC Biological and Modleal Advisory commit tee tad ooadoded by 1967 that fallout from teats com plied by that date would prob atay result la 2,500 to 12,000 d?fects per the world, ileal ? ENmhr * art*" detarganta ?alopad? By I960, these de tergents had replaced i the nation's major da Soma 3.5 billion pounds ot the synthetic cleaning ipnti vara being dumped dm the American drain annually. Only then was 11 found thai the branched-chain hydrocarbon molecules ware able to resist bio-degradation by bacterial enzymes In the sewage treat ment plants. Thus, rivers were filled with foam and the beads on glasses of water looked suspiciously like beer. Further research, after the fact, produced a detergent based upon unbranched hydro carbon molecules, and by July 1, 1965 the new degradable detergent had replaced Its predecessor. However, In septic tank systems (Involving about 34 per cent of the homes in the United States) the de tergents do not break down completely, due to Inadequacy of aeration, and the result Is the familiar fertilizing effect of excess phosphates with Its consequence of grave ecologi cal disturbances. ?Two more shocking ex amples: 1) the sea otters grow fewer on the Pacific Coast. Slips dump their oil in the harbors or along the coasts. The oil gets on the fur of the otter. Then the water pene trates To his skin and he gets pneumonia and dies. 2) the penguins at the South Pole have DDT in their fatty tis sues. Although DDT has never been sprayed at the South Pole, the penguins have ac quired it nonetheless. Like the air which is one atmos phere, the water is one vast ocean. Run-off from the tem perate zones has found its way throughout the world. Fish ab sorbed the DDT, the penguins, at the bottom of the globe, at the fish. Modern technology confirms the poetic admoni tion that "no man Is an is land." Rather the whole world is an island, a vast space ship, 7,900 miles in diameter. And we have come to the day when we no longer live in the comfortable, padded, un disturbed and ancient environ ment which step-by-step had emerged from aeons past. But " lor traces of radioactivity , the world of primitive man was a world of stability, and with al, it was a world of purity. The corrosive and destructive fractions of earth emergent had long before combined into inert and bland noncomltants of Mankind evolving. Until our own day, this open steady state has persisted, enabling living communities to survive and to function through the ages. "This pattern," In the words of Paul B. Sears, "has been based on the use of current energy Income and a relatively efficient recycl ing of materials, along with a working equilibrium of num bers. Our great and grow ing vortices, which suck In fossil energy, water, and the products of field and mine, use them and then spew out the end products In useless, often dangerous form, have no counterpart in the natural world." These, then, are the facts. And, taken together, they de scribe an appalling situation. They point In a calamitous direction and they imply that we are approaching disaster at an ever increasing speed. The facts reveal a colossal indifference to the Environ ment on the part of those who boastfully shape It. Not only an Indifference Is Indicated, but also a failure of under standing of scientific funda mentals. Every scientist and en gineer is aware that the phy sical world is arranged In such a way that one does not get something for nothing. It is tlreaocnely affirmed that for every cause there Is an ef fect, that no system U 100 per cent efficient, that per petual motion Is Impossible and that the entropy of the Universe is increasing. Yet, having made these formal bows In the general direction of Science, the "Builder of Tomorrow's World" is likely to step oat ot the laboratory and spend his entire life Ig noring these basic principles which will play the decisive rote in Man's future. To expect that the atmos phere aatd the waterways of tho world can be endlessly filled with garbage without fact la not only m \ flc position. It Is also tape there once was a time, many fears i waters of the to be piMT* seemed capable of di luting and dissipating what ever substance was placed In It. tf ever there were such a time, It la certainly now put. The limits at both air and water In the squalid role of garbage disposal are now clearly apparent. IT these things are true, if the facts are correct. If the danger Is so great and the 'disaster so near, then one Is prompted to ask a very sim ple question: why do we con tinue this sorry process? The answer , sad to say, If as simple as the question: brief ly put, we want to do things on the cheap. It is cheaper to put your sewer pipe Into the lake, or your open flue Into the air than it Is to do it another way. At the end of the year, you can proudly show the stockholders a fat ter profit. That you are con tributing to the destruction of the National or Global Patri mony of Mankind is a matter that you will defer until a future meeting. And, after things become unbearable, and you are forced to clean up the mess of your own making, a mess from which you have profited, you will probably condemn the government for Its socialism. Such Is the sordid charac ter of the problem. How many Income and expense state ments in our land show fully on the expense side an amount equal to the destruction the companies are causing to the Environment? Very few, if any. If Industry destroys the fish of a river, how much has it destroyed? Suppose the fish catch were only $10,000.00. The river seems to compare unfavorably. But consider that the river might last 10,000 years. What then? In sum, we are applying only the test of short run eco nomic advantage. This Is the tragedy of our situation. We are buying immediate advant age and paying for it with the precious coinage of the future. We are banking our money and making a charge against our children. Such a state of affairs was not envisioned by the great Prophets of Modern Science and Technology. They spoke., of seeking to.harness NaioM i for the benefit of Man. That Is not what we are currently engaged upon. Rather, we are bludgeoning Nature, and we are achieving momentary benefits. But only momentary. For Nature does not bludg eon very welL She has weapons we know not of, and she enforces ?rigidly? the laws, kmm at which ?? do know. OM In particular, N?vr too's Third, has not been ra ft la easy, I realize, while watching a placa of earth moving equipment the slse of a lioiiia^Jo become afflicted with a thrill of megalomMiia. ft la possible, aa one w*ch es a hillside disappear, to know arrogance, so great Is the power of Modern Tech nology. It Is a dangerous In dulgence. It has been exper-i lenced before, and the Greeks called Hubris, or arrogance before the gods, and punish ment for Hubris was both swift and great. It still is. My greatest regret in all of this is that our young stu dents, soon to be out in the field, are so often told that their task in life Is to do the most efficient Job for the least money. Thus, they contribute to the tragedy. They place their very considerable intel ligence and training into the scales on the side at maximum short-term return. And, although many of them realize this, realize that the future ? if there is to be any ? must be guarded In the pre sent, they feel themselves bound by the wishes of their employer. That is the nob of the mat ter. The Engineer views his role as that of Servant, and that is the trouble. He is too good a servant. He feels forc ed to serve his employer and thereby fails to serve him self and his society. And he argues, persuasively, that if he starts serving Society at the expense of his employer he will shortly be receiving no pay. I admit that the argument exists, but I disagree with the conclusion. Consider the other side. If not the Engineer, witli all his expertise, then who will give voice in time to pre vent further damage to the Environment? Who is in Abet ter position to alert the citi zenry to problems before they reach critical proportions? If our citizens are not Inform ed, then how can they make valid decisions? And if they cannot make valid decisions, then what is the future of our .Democracy? Tpe Eftgipeer Is the "Falth -ful lind*Obadlent Servant" In our Technologically-oriented Society. But if he is to be Faithful to the long-range, permanent Interests of that Society, if he is to be Faith ful to his own future as an individual citizen and to the Principles of his Science, then he must become less Obedient than heretofore. Report of A. P. Rodwell, Jr., County Auditor, Showing General Fund Receipts and Disbursements For The County of Warren for April, 1967 GENERAL FUND & OTHERS RECEIPTS Employees Social Security Tax Withheld. $ 397*90 Employees State Withholding Tax Withheld 157.23 1966 Tax Collections 6,271.92 1966 Tax Penalties 365.56 Partial Payment on Taxes 181.01 Schedule "B" Licenses 12.50 Clerk Superior Court, Office Fees, March, 1967 2,505.03 Register of Deeds, Office Fees, March, 1967 798.75 Arrest and Jail Fees .. 49.50 State Aid to Public Libraries 1,000.00 State Aid, Surplus Food Program 548.80 Profits from Warren County A. B.C. Board. 12,898.20 Warren County A. B. C. Board for Law Enforcement. 50.00 Refund, O. A. A. Grants.. 167.07 Salary & Travel for Homemakers 508.70 Administrative Expense, Welfare Department 5,136.00 Miscellaneous Revenue 171.35 Total Receipts $31,219.52 Cash Balance, March 31, 1967 46,033.14 $77,252.66 Less Total Disbursements 28,647.39 Cash Balance, April 30, 1967 ..... *48,605.27 GENERAL FUND & OTHERS DISBURSEMENTS Carolina Power & Light Co., Electrical Services $ 258.40 Warren County Welfare Department, Stamp Account. 30.00 Littleton Library, County Aid. 40.00 Norllna Library, County Ald...(. 40.00 Warren County Community Library, State and County Aid. 210.00 Loyce J4? Conn*11, Expense Allowance 41.67 Warren County Welfare Department, Public Health... 191.57 Colored Community Center, Donation on Water........ 10.00 Warm County Health Department, Public Health..;... 1,238.52 Carolina Tel. t Tel, Co., Telephone Services.......... 248.44 A. P. Rodwell, Jr., Tax Collector, Distribution of Partial Payment Taxes. 602.58 A P. Rodwell, Jr., Expense Account.... 12.20 lira. Lanle M. Hayes, Stamp Account. 19.00 ,WUllam W. Taylor, Jr., Rant, F. H. A. Office.......... 75.00 Mrs. Grace R. Kearney, Transcribing Kvldeno*. 10,80 James H. Limer, Costs, Collecting Delinquent Taxes. 1,109.80 Russell Uniform Co., Uniforms, Sheriff's Department 104.48 Kearney's Service * Auto Repairs, Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department*.,.... 83.27 Clarence A. Davis, sheriff, Travel Allowance. e??s??sess 133.48 Warrantee insurance Agency, Insurance Premiums.... .,1,087.80 McCarroU insurance Agency, Bond Premium... 10.00 Town of WflrfaoUiif WM#r Chtrf#i? SMI Hardware Co., Ouppll?, Court 131.68 Hunter Dm CO., too.. Supplies, J*1J ????????*????? 11.38 lira. Lanle M. Hayes, Attending Meeting In Durham.... 18.15 Jo&?(* P. New so in, Wall are Board Meeting ATraval i?.?0 Marvin K. Ay cock, Welfare Board Maatlnc 4 Travel.. 11. >8 The Raoord Pr In tint Co., SuppllM, Welfare Department 5.78 Storr Salea Co., Supplies, WaUara Department.......... 8.70 I. B. M. Corporation, supplies, Walfara Departmaot... 13.80 Mra. J. E. Adams, Travel Allowance. ........... 53.80 MaybeUe B. Reams, Traval Allowance.. e?w??a>a??>?? 23.72 Sandra N. Scott, Travel Allowance.. ee?e?e*M??e??????a?? 48.08 Margaret T. Myrlck, Travel Allowance...... 58.04 -Tfthiiatnn,?Trival . 32.28 Tfeelma W. Davis, Traval Allowance .7.V......7.T. 33.#8 Sarah Ann Russell, Travel Allowance 32.06 Dr. Frank P. Hunter, Professional Services.. 15.00 Dr. H. H. Foster, Professional Services... .......... 5.00 F. W, Reams, Expense Account 53.69 L. B. Hardage, Expense Account 00 Radio T. V. Center, Install Air Conditioners, Farm Agent's Office.... 32.12 W. A. Miles Hardware Co., Supplies, Farm Agent..... 19.89 Emily Balllnger, Expense Account. 5.60 G. H. Rooker, Jail Subsistence. 500.50 Warren F. C. X. Service, Fuel OIL 179.31 Benton Furniture Co., Inc., Supplies, Court House 65.82 W. A. Miles Hardware Co., Supplies, Jail 15.36 The Record Printing Co., Supplies, Register of Deeds 26.78 The Record Printing Co., Advertising, Rabies Vaccination 70.00 The Record Printing Co., Publishing Monthly Report 45.50 Clarence A. Davis, Expense Account 5.50 N. C. Public Employees' Social Security Agency, Administrative Expense. 130.50 Julian W. Farrar, Travel Allowance 34.10 Odom Motor Service, Supplies, Court House. 2.65 Carolina Overall Corp., Supplies, Court House, Agri. Bldg. Si Jail 17.31 B. & D. Motors, Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department 5.55 Robert B. Neal, Supplies, Auditor's Office 66.19 L. C. Cooper, Expense Account. 5.00 George W. Koonce, Expense Account 20.84 Robert B. Neal, Supplies, Agri. Extension Service...., 37.56 Boyce Drug Co., Supplies, 4-H Club 6.77 Bertha B. Forte, Expense Account 12.93 Knight's Appliance & T. V. Center, Repairs, Water Heater, Welfare Department 15.19 Tar Heel Tire Sales 4 Service, Inc., Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department 52.07 House Electric Co., Repairs, Jail 5.00 Warren Tire Service, Inc., Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department 27.33 Shell Oil Co., Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department 21.C?? J. C. Penny Co., Inc., Uniforms, Sheriff's Department 29 as Rumble Oil & Refining Co., Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department 45.62 Littleton Sales Co., Supplies, Welfare Department 12.91 Storr Sales Co., Supplies, Welfare Department 3.61 Qrkln. Exterminating Co., Inc., Repairs, Jail 5.85 Case Blue Print & Supply Co., Inc., (Supplies, Register of Deeds 9.06 W, G. Will cox, Supplies, Auditor's Office 12.62 Cities Service Oil Co., Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department 31.75 Hospital Saving Association, Hospital Insurance Premium..... 9.38 Duro-Test Corporation, Supplies, Court House 84.64 James H. Anderson Co., Inc., Supplies, Jail 89.41 General^. Bull ding Supply Co., Repairs, Jail 53.73 Ni C, Depart merit of Conservation & Development, County Part 417.79 State Commission For The Blind, County Part 382.35 Brame Speciality Co., Supplies, Court House 21.06 Phillips Petroleum Co., Automobile Expenses, Sheriffs Department 35.79 Hall & McChesney, Inc., Supplies, C. S. C 34.37 H*U & McChesney, Inc., Supplies, Register of Deeds.. 131.81 Pfeifrl R. Duncan, Salary 150.00 Warren County O. A. A. Fund, CountyPart 3,079.71 Warren County A. F. D. C. Fund, CountyPart 2,384.48 Warren County A. P. T. D. Fund, County Part .*.... 1,713.15 Warren County M. A. A. Fund, County Part 68.56 A. P. Rodwell, Jr., Salary, April, 1967 442.36 Roberta W. King, Salary, April, 1967 317.63 Will J. Bobbltt, Salary, April, 1967 277.20 A. E. Wilson, Salary & Travel, April, 1967 380.30 Mrs. Lanle M. Hayes, Salary, April, 1967 427.35 Ks>herlne H. Bullock, Salary, April, 1967 181.39 Martha B. Powell, Salary, April, 1967... 169.59 Isabel Nelson, Salary, April, 1967 303.19 John R, Blaylock, Salary, April, 1967 66.00 F. W. Reams, Salary, April, 1967 272.87 L. B. Hardage, Salary, April, 1967....... 224.84 Erdine C. Rogers, Salary, April, 1967 230.83 Leonard C. Cooper, Salary, April, 1967 166.42 George Willis Koonce, Salary, April, 1967 121.00 Emily Balllnger, Salary, April, 1967 153.71 Bertha Janet Forte, Salary, April, 1967 123.01 Ella Carroll Dun son, Salary, April, 1967 114.45 Julius Banzet, Salary, April, 1967 231.00 Charles M. White, m, Salary. April, 1967 264.00 Jim H. Hundley, Salary, April, 1967...*..?..???..??.*?...? *398.08 Mary Frances Rodwell, Salary, April, 1967 317.63 Loyce M. Connell, Salary, April, 1967 317.63 Clarence A. Davis, Salary, April, 1967.. 366.57 Bonnie G. Stevenson, Salary, April, 1967 350.00 G. H. Rooker, Salary, April, 1967 150.00 Lloyd W. Newsom, Salary, April, 1967 310.00 Melvin Dorsey Capps, Salary, April, 1967 310.00 Julian W. Farrar, Salary, April, 1967 580.00 Mildred Allen Adams, Salary, April, 1967 396.00 Maybelle Barker Reams, Salary, April, 1967 377.00 Margaret T. Myrlck, Salary, April, 1967... 377.00 Sandra N. Scott, Salary, April, 1967 377.00 Matt R. Johnston, Salary, April, 1967... 360.00 Margaret S. Felts, Salary, April, 1967 298.00 Laura Gardner Tucker, Salary, April, 1967 247.00 Margaret Parkinson, Salary, April, 1967 118.00 Thelma W. Davis, Salary, April, 1967 215.00 Sarah A. Russell, Salary, April, 1967 215.00 Dr. H. H. Foster, Salary, April, 1967 66.00 Lulle Price Gay, Salary, April, 1967 no.OO Amos L. Capps, Salary & Travel, April, 1967 65.96 R. P. Thome, Salary & Travel, April, 1967...... >25.50 Richard R. Davis, Salary & Travel, April, 1967...?.. 24.70 Alfred J. Ellington, Salary, April, 1907 48.00 John A. Wilson, Jr., Salary 6 Travel, April, 1967 85.70 JimM H. Llmer, Salary, April, 19?7 105.10 The Bank of Halifax, Bank Service Charge.... 5.00 Warren County Memorial Library, State * County Aid. 516.83 Harry M. Williams, Jr., SohWm, Surplus Food. Program. Texaco, Inc., Automobile Expenses, Sheriff's Department. 8.36 Harry If. Williams, Jr., Salary. 117 u Walter Russel Taylor, Salary 96.M Jasper Boyd, jr., Salary , 74.4? Wilbert Harris, Salary.. ?????????????????e?e? 3.50 William Arthor Alston, 8*lary .. l.M Willi* Cook, salary, April, 1967 220.00 James A. Jefferson, Jr., Salary, AprU, 1907 ???*???e??? 62.60 Retirement System of N. C., Retirement, Service 107.22 ToUl Disbursement* .?M,M7.<9
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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May 26, 1967, edition 1
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