ill i IBPBBr . I ■ . -jMKmr *~ f -^4a|Bpi^pPv - •• -JnlHhßh-SS^"*^ 'T "- f W sft i, K. |W \ BBllifff " ' , a i i, | , I 1 3 im tow ■ - ’“St _ ' H B / V -"a jl'-i'i-N H /*&«*, I BBWMWBMMBHBHI>'- J *■' .q- jdW?.:'? s A B-fi ■■■; \i\ ■ ?.'*,"' ■ ■ _■* ,*. M.fk"’ M iff 1 GETS AWARD —In an awards ceremony recently at the Aircraft Repair and Sup ply Center, CDR Robert Russell, Chief, Production Division, presented a cash award of SIOO to William A. Perry, Accounting Technician, for superior performance of his assigned duties. Perry is from Edenton. Sport Afield By Ted Kesting What’s in the future for the : American angler? Will he be able to compete with drastic Changes in America’s favorite outdoor sport? Most of these changes in the next decade will please, but some will shock you. So, let’s start with a shocker. Probably 80 per cent of our non-mountainaus trout, and many of our warm - water ypecies, will be put-and-take, reared stock from state and national hatcheries. Much of this will be neces sary because of growing ster ilization among wild species, caused by the intolerable ac cumulation of hard pesti cides, like DDT, in their re productive organs. And, fish will be con demned in many areas as un fit for human consumption. Not necessarily because eat ing these alone would do us in. It’s just that by 1980 we will have accumulated in our carcasses over 20 ppm (parts per million) of hard pesti cides, and many malaises will be traced to these nondegrad ing chemicals. Our DDT level today is up to 12 pipm. Oh sure, by 1980 all SO states will have banned these chlorinated hydrocarbons. But it will have come too late. Hopefully, but not certainly, by 1985 the effect may have run its course and some wild of fish will be able to re-establish themselves. Meantime, within the next Weekend Specials at DO mr Fnt Delivery &M Jill** _ °* < £ l * r * ot 0309 Super or More W Market USDA Inspected FRYERS t2s< FRYERS w i29< Fresh Ground—All Beef PORK CHOPS Mb Cut ' 11-75. Red and White Wide Chicken Aluminum Foil My* foot sou. T urkeu 49c 6 for $1 Bath Size Phtipi* P-taoKve pi Soap too Count ®«“-10c I p*»79c Kleenex Boutique Tissues ary, qotogg !»<« 27c K- . ■ five years, the (Food and Drug 1 Administration will have Is sued a public warning not to ; eat certain species a! fish un- i less all fatty tissue is re moved. Reason: The present DDT maximum allowed by the HDA is 5 ppm in meat and fishes. Fatty tissues of cer tain fish species contain from 40 to 90 ppm. And because subdermal fat is a collecting spot for DDT, we’ll be skin ning all of our fish as a mea sure of precaution. So much for DDT. What else does the meat decade promise? There will be far more planting of mature, keeper-size fish than today. No longer win millions of morality-prone fingerlings be dumped to suffer an extreme ly high and costly mortality. Fishery specialists will be experimenting with a new program that will delight most fishermen and disgust the sporting breed. Ten per cent of stocked fish will be implanted with a device that • can be detected to reveal their whereabouts. The detecting equipment will be too expensive and so phisticated for fishermen to use. But, state department personnel will locate the fish and drop buoy markers to denote the species detected below. Electronic -fish locators will also reveal the size and shape of a fish, allowing some iden m ciowam mii» edenton, north Carolina, Thursday September it, in*. tification. And underwater microp hones will reveal, audibly, the feeding sprees of fish be low, and many species will be 1 recognizable by the type of j sounds they produce. According to Homer Circle,! Angling Editor for Sports | Afield Magazine, while many - of our lakes and streams will | be lost to thermal, chemical i and human pollutants, some! ten million acres of new fish ing water will be available on. state and government im-1 poundments. A PEOPLES BANK SAVINGS ACCOUNT IS REALLY SOUPER. Lupton Attends President’s Club FfBLADELraRA —R. Hector Lupton, Jr., of Raleigh, at tended the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company’s bi annual agents’ convention and annual President’s Club meet ing August 18-00 at the Greenbrier, White Sulphur Strings, W. Va. Lupton is manager of the Fidelity Mu tual Life agency at 333 Fay etteville Street. The convention was attend ed by approximately 200 Fi delity agents and their wives. They included the 80 mem bers of Fidelity’s President’s Club, the firm’s top agents. Lupton, who lives at 410 Mar Lowe Road, joined Fidelity in 1953. A quick check of the Boone A Crockett record book re veals that about one-quarter of the largest lions come from Montana.—Sports Afield. In the South a hog is a local expression for a whop per bass.—Sports Afield. »«^>w«d|^s>i<|bs FOR YOUR WINTER LAWNS USE RYE GRASS or FESCUE - Call - Home Feed & Fertilizer Co. . Phone 482-2313 or 482-2308 f W. Carteret St. Edenton, N. C. £ „..--S3jj7» mf"' *- ——; iin i ' l '" 1 "' i', -|-|. r n | ~ r "' m"11 , ',ll' —^ TOMATO KSOtfP** Heaters Add To Time You Enjoy Patio Outdoor living is delight ful but only when it’s com fortable. Oas infra-red radiant heat ers now are adding months to life in the great outdoors for an ever-increasing num ber of families. Last year sales of infra-red heaters soared and they are expected to jump again this year. Many families have found they can enjoy cookouts even in winter with infra-red heat ers installed on their patios. Hunters and fishermen now use them, too, to keep warm at the campsite without heavy clothing even in be low-freezing temperatures. Infra-red heaters may be stationary or portable. The portable units, which use LP gas, can be used while riding in a golf cart, working in a garage, or camping, and for melting ice and snow on walks and driveways. Hand carts are available for sev eral of the portable models. When you open a Peoples Bank Savings Account (either the Regular Passbook Account or the Premium Passbook Account), you'll not only receive the highest guaranteed bank interest allowed on savings, you'll also receive a little good will gesture from Peoples Bank in the form of a can of Campbell's Tomato Soup. The can of soup is Peoples Bank's way of saying "thank you" for opening a souperior savings account. ® Peoples Bank JL member l.dJ.c. WliSß|lWbbw^b ’ c 11,111 —: m I ■ (V^Bi • .J V ?Si.? i ?S. brak f® ? tandard equipment on all but Chevy Vans highlight the many improvements in the 1971 Chevrolet light truck line. The disc brake system has a proportioning device for more balanced braking between front and rear wheels. Also new are a more massive looking grille, improved cab seating and ventilation, and more powerful headlamps. All engines will operate on the new lower lead fuels and meet required Federal emission B*»"dards. Our idea of a sap is one who thinks that the verdict of a jury is always right. FOR QUICK RESULTS TRY A CLASSIFIED AD m 914; a/ie {Pledged ig p* / v TO CONDUCT WITH DIGNITY = i« l r l\j HE FINAL TRIBUTE (ttoltmtal funeral i 1 ritt £fortl] Carolina pi Hiway 32 North Phone 482-4486 lp Providing All Facilities r| That every detail may be perfect, we ■ provide a spacious chapel, private fam ily room, ample parking for cars of / those attending the services. MARVIN S. BARHAM E. N. (Pete) MANNING (t Funeral Director .Funeral Director \ V and Kmbalmer \ I PAGE FIVE-A