C, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1961 VOLUME XIII Jones Board Approves Minor Expenses in December Meeting Monday the Jones County Board of Commissioners approved pay ment of mitjor expense items that had not been budgeted: $60 for tuition of two students in a nuclear physics class being given by the extension department of East Carolina College.' $200 to New Bern Attorney (Charles Abernathy for defending Johnny Payton, Jones County ne gro pauper, who drew a 15-year prison term last week after plead ing gufhy to attempting to rape his daughter. 1 $25 to Caswell Training School to help with the annual Christmas Party. ' $115.29 reimbursement to the sheriff department for expenses in volved in returning Ellison Rhodes Jr. from New York City to Tren ton to face trial for the armed rob bery of the ^Jones County ABC store at Wyse Fork. And an authorization to the coun ty accountant to pay the room rent, registration and mileage of Regis ter of Deeds Bill Parker to a school for registers of deeds that is being conducted m Chapel Hill by the Institue of Government. The board also authorized the refund of $28.07 to Ted C. Cotter man, who had accidentally paid his taxes twice in one year. when a tohacco farmer makes a good crop, apparently it would be more appropriate to say "he earned it.” While the average flue-cured to bacco farmer grossed over $1,000 per acre in 1961, this money was a long ways from being all profit. Farm management studies at North Carolina State College show that it cost, the average tobacco grower nearly $800 to produce 1,800 pounds per acre. About $265 of the $800 went for variable costs. These include such things as plant bed expenses, ferti lizer, insecticides, fumigants, twine, fuel oil, insurance, marketing, haul ing and warehouse charges, and ex penses of operating a tractor and truck. Fixed costs accounted for another $135 per acre. Included here were such things as depreciation and in terests on buildings and equipment, repairs, insurance and taxes. Of all expenses, however, labor was the greatest, accounting for nearly $400 of the $800 per acre. Farm Management Specialist Jim Allgood says it still takes about 450 hours of labor to produce $1,800 pounds of tobacco with partial me I Mp.': chanization. By partial mechanization, he means using such things as tractors and mechanical transplanters, In arriving at their labor posts, management specialists estimated that 10 per cent of the labor would be of the managerial type,, worth $2 pe# hour. Other labor was val ued at only 75/cent per hour, which is below the prevailing wages in moat segments of the ecohomy. In recent years, the number of man hours needed to produce an acre of tobacco has been cut by ,/thefuse of such things as sof igants for plant bed sites,,d sucker control, oil.curers and me cb*nc**1 harvesters, .Total labor Costs have > increase, however, because Principal Pippin u Winner of Prized Ba«eball in Kinston Mr., and Mrs. Leo Nance, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pippin and Mr. and Mrs. Z. A. Koonce attended the Ladies Night at the School Mas ters meeting in Kinston Monday night. Guest speaker was Clyde King, a former Brooklyn Dodger Pitcher, now with the Baltimore Orioles Organization. He is man ager of the AAA Ball Club in Rochester, N. Y. After answering a question from King about baseball correctly, Pip pin received a baseball autograpbted by Roger Maris, Harmon KillabrCw and Jim Gentile. Needless to say, he was very pleased. County Holidays Monday the Jones County Board of Commissioners voted all county employees the following Christmas Holidays: December 22, 23, 25, and 26. All court house offices except that of the sheriff will be closed for that period which begins Thurs day night before Christmas and ends Wednesday morning after Christmas. riSi&g’lffi-ttour wage vanses. vsm bkT costs haVe continued to climb, studies show that the cost of Some machinery has been rising at the rate of 4 per cent annually. Economists usually agree that mechanization offers the best pros pects for reducing tobacco produc tion costs. This is why State Col lege is putting considerable effort into the development of such things as bulk curers and mechanical har vesters./ New Bernian’s Cow Has Fine Record The Holstein-Friesian Associa tion of America has announced the completion of an outstanding offi cial production record by a registered Holstein cow in this area — Shangri La Sovereign Anchusa 3315910 owned by O. D. Dunn of New- Bern produced 20,070 pounds of milk and 728 pounds of butterfat in 305 days on twice daily milking as a 9-year-old. State College supervised the weighing and testing of production as a part of the official herd test ing programs of the national Hop stein organization. In contrast,-the annual produc tion of the average U. S. dairy cow ,is generally estimated at approx imately 7,000 pounds of milk con taining 265 pounds of butterfat. Andrew E. King On USS Kitty Hawk Andrew E, King, steward first class, ,USN, son of Johnnie King of PottocksVille, is serving aboard the glided missile aircraft carrier 4JSS Kitty Hawk, the world’s first ship’ of its kind, home ported at San Diego, California. ■ ' The new ship has just completed its trip around the Hdm at the southern tip of Spt#h America, to Jones County’s Tax listers are Named Monday the Jones County Board of Commissioners named tax listers for each of the county’s townships for 1962. They are: Lucy Parker Jenkins in Pollocks ville Township. Harold Mattocks for White Oak Township. Annie Mallard for Trenton Town Ship. Walter Ives for Chinquapin Township. Alva B. Howard for Tuckahoe Township. Braxton Howard for Cypress Creek Township. J. P. Davenport for Beaver Creek Township. Friendship Supper Friendship Free Will Baptist Church near Trenton will have a supper, served at the church from five until seven Saturday. Plates of either turkey or ham will be Served with all the trimmings. Proceeds will go into the church building fund. For those, such as some news paper men, who like a little turkey and a little ham on their plates this can also be arranged with a prop er silver offering. Mrs. Armstrong is Named to 4-H Board Mrs. A. C. Armstrong, of Route 1, Trenton has been named to the uttd, In