Thursday, July 22, 1982 N.C. Fishing Laws Noted All visitors to the North Carolina coast should be aware of a few of the State’s “fishing” laws. These are the rules which assure that the State will always have a good supply of seafood. A person may do something as seemingly innocent as pick up and keep a clam or a scallop and be on the wrong side of the law. Although the offender will probably receive no more than a gentle reprimand, it couEl he embarrassing and could spoil a vacation day. The Division of Marine Fisheries offers the following rules to watch for: Clams may be taken any day of the week between sunrise and sunset. Minimum size is one - inch thick shell. You may take a bushel without any kind of license. Watch for orange signs proclaiming polluted water. Oyster season is closed during May, June, July and August. Scallop season is closed during Nfpy, June, July and August. Crabs have to be five inches across (from tip of spike to tip of spike). If you use any kind of net other than a dip net, check first with a fisheries inspector. Some areas hear inlets are closed during summer COMPLETE fY^JANITORIAL \AJ service an introductory offer during July onlj you can renew your average size livingroom or office carpet for only 49.95 WINDOW CLEANING CONTRACT SERVICE CARPET SHAMPOOING DAILY WEEKLY-MONTHLY FLOOR CLEANING FULLY INSURED FIRE CLEAN-UP EQUIPMENT A SUPPLIES 37 Years in Professional Cleaning Modest Rateswith Fast, Dependable and Pleasing Results. " CALL EDENTON ‘ 482-8386, 482 8576 \ , FOR SALE II WATERFRONT —• Charming one story house on two j waterfront lot, Chowan River bulkheaded, with pier. Three bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room, kit., closed-fn porch overlooking water, workshop for handyman. House furnished or unfurnished. 1978 DOUBLEWIDE On large corner lot with 3 bedrooms, | living room, family room, kit., 2 full baths. Dining room. | Underpinned washer, dryer, living room furniture, furnished. Financing available at 14 percent. LOT ON WEST GALE STREET Close to downtown, churches, hospital, and school. Perfect for building. LOT CORNER OF PARK AVE. AND JOHNSON ST. Priced for quick sale. LOT ON MONTPELIER DRIVE Reduced for quick sale - 100 x 200 $3,900 COMMERCIAL BUILDING lncome producing downtown Edenton. Good long-term investment, tax shelter. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ACROSS FROM SHOPPING j CENTER Excellent investment, income producing. HOME SITES NEAR COUNTRY CLUB Wooded and clear. Low downpayment • 5 yrs. to pay. TRAILER LOTS 5O x 150. '5 11 « FOR SALE 23.22 acres, 5 miles north of Edenton, in tersection of U.S. 17 and N.C. 37. Ideal for commercial or In dustrial use. WATERFRONT LOT On Chowan Golf and Country Club, i Breathtaking view of Albemarle Sound. OVER 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN ALL KINDS OF IN III VESTMENTS. CALL US BEFORE YOU BUY. CONSULT I WITH US BEFORE YOU LIST FOR SALE. 1 Home Realty U 482-2153 Days 482-2375 Nights JJI months. You may use only one crab pot per person on a dock or pier! More pots might be possible if the site is within a designated crab pot area. Shrimp season may open and close, and open and close again during summer months. The closed and open areas might be small and near one another. One creek, for example, might be closed while a nearby channel is open. Check closely on the area you want to shrimp. All nets, other than dip nets, could be subject to regulation. A hand seine, for example, has to have a IV4 inch stretched mesh. Ef fective October 1, a cast net may be used in coastal fishing waters, including closed shrimping areas, to take no more than 100 shrimp per day. In open shrimping areas, there is no limit. Any boat used in gathering seafood species, even a small boat to get you and your net somewhere, requires licensing - except for gathering a bushel of clams or a bushel of oysters in season. Fishing is generally free of regulation con siderations, except when a net is used. There is no hook and line license required. Anglers may fish all the time. Flounder have an 11 - inch minimum size limit. Striped bass (rockfish) have a minimum size limit of 12 inches. No number limit is set on stripers except in sections of Neuse and Trent rivers above New Bern where the limit is 25 per day. Channel bass (red drum, puppy drum*) have a minimum size limit of 14 inches, and you may only take two per day larger than 32 inches. In New Hanover County, no channel bass larger than 20 pounds may be taken. A few areas of brackish waters require a fresh water fishing license issued by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. No license is required to gig flounder unless you sell them. Sea turtles (and their nests and eggs) and por poises are protected. A coastal fishing regulation booklet is available free from N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries, P.O. Box 769, Morehead City, N.C. 28557. A list of fisheries law en forcement officers in the various coastal com munities and their phone numbers are included in the booklet. Tips For Fishermen By Tom Mann Although the vast majority of today’s kids are the kind we’re proud of, still too many are getting hooked on hurtful things like pot, alcohol, and just plain “do nothing" attitudes brought on by boredom. Brer Tom suggests we get our kids hooked mi hooking fish. There’s something about getting a kid into the out doors, alongside a stream or pond, or afloat in a boat, trying to outsmart a fish. Some people call them “dumb fish” but it doesn’t take a kid long to discover that there’s a lot more to it than dangling a worm on a bent pin. And, a good way to start is to get a couple cane poles, a can of garden worms, a dozen No. 6 Aberdeen hooks, THE CHOWAN HERALD Highlights From Weyerhaeuser A forestry workshop for elementary school teachers and teachers of vocational agriculture sponsored jointly by Weyerhaeuser Company and A & T State University (Greensboro) is entering its final phases this week. The 10-day course, titled Forestry and the Environment, will aid on Friday, July 23. Taught as a three-hour credit course on the Greensboro campus of A & T, the two week workshop includes both classroom lectures and field tours. It focuses on showing the role of trees in the total environment and the role of forests and forest products in the economy. This is the 10th year the course has been offered and it is being coordinated by John Wehrenberg and Ed Brown, both of New Bern. Two Weyerhaeuser employees in the North Carolina region are being recognized for 25 years service with the company this month. They are Solomon M. Carpenter Plymouth and Robert L. Toler of Ernul. Fourteen Weyerhaeuser some split shot, bobbers, and a picnic lunch. Take a youngster, yours or a neigh borhood kid, out to the nearest bluegiU or catfish hole. Find out where one is by asking at the tackle store, a fishing friend, or your local conservation officer. Add enough split shot to sink the baited hook just over bottom so that the bobber will come to at tention. Teach the kid when to set the hook, and watch magic happen! Remember: Fishermen are special... Christ so loved them that He chose four among His twelve apostles. And fishermen never really grow old because the kid in the fisherman never really grows up. TO OUR STOCK OF VERY EFFICIENT GMCs, WE’VE ADDED A OTTIE SOMETHMGYDUH IKE. The truck name known for will carry 1500 pounds of We’ve got Little Rigs in big rigs now also stands for payload. stock right now. Come in a very special small one. But happily, its appetite and see how little it costs ThenewGMC S-15- for fuel is more like that of to own one. pickup. a Compact car than a truck. Use estimated MPG for comparison. The GMC name on the , Q| . . . ~— 777 Your mileage may differ depending on griUele ß you know there's « 3 hardworking truck behind lower in California. Some GMC trucks it. In fact, with its available 39 [2BJ 34 [24M are equipped with engines produced I V-fi by other GM Divisions, subsidiaries. longoea DOX, V-O engine tgga or affiliated companies worldwide. and other options, the S-15 ee us for details. mas mi who wfh mi own VISIT THE HOME OF THE GIANT a«i mu r motor corp - J/\[ 111111 k EDENTON 482-8421 § UHURLn Broad St Ext. employees in the Nortf Carolina region are being honored for 15 years service to the company this month. They are William W. Hill Jr., Louis H. Mobley and James L. Modlin all of Plymouth. Joan S. Crad dock, Milton C. Craft, Richard E. Lanier and Richard F. Wrenn all of Jacksonville. Gurtha R. Barrow and Earnest C. Norman both of Roper. Joseph K. Phelps of Belhaven, James D. Pierce of Richlands, William Ray of Washington, Elwood D. Sanders of Pink Hill and Jimmy D. Taylor of Williamston. Twenty-seven of the Weyerhaeuser employees in the North Carolina Region are being recognized for 10 years service to the com pany. They are Gloria J. Blount, Jaunita Blount, Herman L. Carr, Rodney H. Duzan, James F. Phelps, Joesph R. Snell and Richard B. Swain all of Plymouth. David F. Brown, Charlie Lowther, Emory R. Norman and Jack H. Norman Jr. all of Roper. Willie H. Cham L & G Company of Edenton Are Now Dealers For LENNOX Heat Pump and A/C Systems We have the newest LENNOX lines and we service warranted LENNOX equipment L & G Company Heating S Air Conditioning Contractors New Office/Warehouse Location on Mexico Road Phone 488-8884 Edenton. >C Joe Lee Lowell Gleseke blee and Brinkley Smallwood both of Windsor. Stephen C. Manzene, Earnest M. Shepard Jr. and Preston G. Spear all of New Bern. Charles E. Davis and -Luther N. Mann both of Pantego, George E. Green of Broadway, Tommy L. Guinn of Jacksonville, Court Report Issued The Annual Report of the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts, covering the fiscal year July l, 1980, to June 30, 1981, has been released by Franklin E. Freeman, Jr., director. The document, required by state law to be prepared for the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and the members of the General Assembly, is a statistical and narrative review of the activities of each level of the court system in all of the counties of the State. The report sets forth an analysis of receipts and disbursements within the system of courts, and details the types and numbers of cases disposed of on a county -by - county basis. Os Robert L. Henderson of Hubert, Richard P. Hughes of Merry Hill, Joseph K. Jordan Jr. of Belhaven, Sandra M. Lilley of Jamesville, Amy R. Miller of Pollocksville. Willie E. Smith of Pittsboro and Donny W. Tenney of Williamston. special interest to students and others concerned with the growth in the workload of the courts, the Report shows that in the 1980-81 fiscal year, there was a 10 per cent increase in the Superior Court filings over 1979-80, from 74,899 to 82,441, and a 4.3 per cent increase in District Court filings, from 1,458,647 in fiscal year 1979-80 to 1,520,826 in 1980-81. The courts collected a total of $51,913,089 in fines, for feitures, and fees, of which over $26 - million was remitted to the various counties. “I believe that we can be proud of the overall good record of performance of the North Carolina courts during the 1980-81 fiscal year”, Freeman said. “Although the filings in creased by 10 per cent in the Superior Courts, and by 4.3 per cent in the District Courts, the number of court system personnel increased by less than one per cent, from 3,361 in 1979-80 to 3,389 in 1980-81. People! That's the story of the Assemblies of Qod. Over 10 million people, young and old iHt sh 7i/ywjY from all tvi walks of wor- H| J ship in As semblles ■Es of Ood churches - around the world with new churches opening at the rate of almost one a day. Read about the world's largest Pentecostal denomination— and the fastest growing—ln the August issue of THE SATURDAY EVEmnO POST, at your newsstand now. This message shared with you by your friends at: First Assembly of God U.S. 17 Business South Edenton, N.C. Page 3-B Hoke Roberson Kenneth Worrell and Joe Holley Invite Everyone To ASK US ABOUT GMAC FINANCING AT RATES THAT MAKE GOOD SENSE SAVE THOUSANDS! 12.5% Leasing ☆ APR ☆ Just Received! Regals, Centuries, LeSabres & Electras We’re Overstocked On J2000'5... Give Us Your Offer - We May Take It! f 1982 INHERE NOW! J With This Ad ORDER GMC LIGHTS *loo°° OVER COST all abovf DRIVER ED REBATE s lsoo°° ON ALL "J” CARS mm PONTIAC _ “Goodwrench” Service by Bill Hahne MttMptan jnl m ■kjctic* i The twjanc* ffcap® From Gerent Motors lldoke^