Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / July 16, 1970, edition 1 / Page 7
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■. • H| • fHHi fl H && a;A , *9!^B I ' >w . w m \ 9 JJlaf jP* l l'l B /w/ ■ l|m»': Mm w -• ** J " i W ■% v' -/•»•;* *• v---- .y^BPBP-‘^~.Trf.‘. .^uTlt.C’. 'fm »• *•' **; “ ••• m‘l -Ifjp : ./ FM m '.*, .*fl!‘ ;l J ■/ '■ : r;' f £ 4H GOING TO CHOWAN—Orientation for students who will register at Chowan College in the fall is currently being held at Chowan with Edenton resident, Kathleen Dowd, left, attending July 7. From left, she is shown with Charlotte Warren r Littleton, and Wanda J. Bragg of Franklin ton, as they discuss a placement test with Clifton Collins, director of guidance and counseling. Activities include tests, mess ~4ges from staff members, tour of campus, and visual aids on preparation for college. Kathle.il is the daughter of Mrs. Larry Dowd and a graduate of Albemarle Academy. County ASCS Office News f ; By H. O. WEST Cwntjr Executive Director FLUE-CURED TOBACCO FARMERS VOTE JULY 16 Flue-cured tobacco farmers are urged to vote in the ref erendum to be held Thurs day, July 10. The polls will be open from 7 A. M. to 7 P. M. Growers will deter mine if lhey want to con tinue the acreage - poundage program and price support in 1971, 1972 and 1973. The pro gram will continue if approv ed by two-thirds or more of jfc* growers vcting. T - AH farmers 18 years of age or older are eligible to vote in the referendum if they Share in the 1970 flue-cured Tobacco crop or its proceeds. Where no tobacco is produced in 1970 on a tobacco allot ment farm, only the owner and operator are eligible to vote. The acreage-poundage pro gram for flue-cured tobacco Idlows for carrying forward undermarketing} from a short crop to the next year. Grow may also ’ market up to sensational value in a compact console / " w/TuUl" 'i fflgiant-screen DIAQ. 295 sq. in. picture i \Mf I tB mpHI The TURNER • Model A4512W I Beautiful Contemporary styled compact console in grained Walnut color on select hardwood solids and veneers. 5" x 3” Twin-Cone Speaker. fuUhnlth $499.95 quality...only HP WORLD'S FINEST COLOR TV PERFORMANCE A RELIABILITY 1 TIMI SO handcrafted chassis ombmm temeui Zenith Handcrafted dependability with CHROMATIC BRAIN color demodulator lean uni ran demodutetor has the first integrated circuitry ever seed to produce a color TV picture. MW ZEMTH COLOR COMMANDER ... Hoar ana knob adjusts contrast and color level with brightness la proper balanrs simultaneously—end they stay perfectly in Delenoe as you adjust the color picture to match changing MgW levels lit lira room. There's no longer any need to turn • mmmnhws Advanced Zenith IMF Channel Selector tor easy, precise sstecdon es UHF channats with smooth iorward-reverse Oywhsal aoUon. ■ ior ultra seasmva reception. • aUMNHM* COLOR TV HCTUM TWM lor in Her plctura brightness. Did guaMy goes in baton the name goes orr* Jackson's Rads & TV Service Stem. 110 per cent of the farm’s poundage quota—without pen alty —by borrowing from their next year’s quota. Price support under the acreage - poundage program is available on up to 110 per cent of the farm’s poundage quota if .the harvested acre age is within the farm’s acre age allotment. A marketing quota penalty applies to any tobacco marketed above 110 per cent of the farm’s pound age quota. If growers do not approve „the acreage - poundage quota program on July 16, no mar keting quota, no acreage allot ments and no price support will be in effect for the 1971 flue-cured tobacco crop. The State ASC Committee urges all flue-cured tobacco growers to vote on this im portant question on Thurs day, July 16. As farmers continue to make up a small er percentage of the total population each year, it is .important that they vote on all issues affecting farm pro grams, THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1970. Polling places for Chowan County are: Community A —ASCS office. Community B—Earl Smith’s store. Community C —“ Teeny Boy” Perry’s store. Wily Oriental Deer Elude Bow and Arrow Hunters Almost 50 archers some of whom spent a week stalking their prey, were unable to bag a single Sika deer during the 1969 bow and arrow sea son on Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge on Virginia's Eastern Shore. The bow and arrow hunt for the elusive oriental deer is an annual fall event at the refuge, which is less than 100 miles from the modern Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel. Searchlight Throws Rectangular Beam A new xenon searchlight has been developed for search and rescue operations. It provides a unique rectangular beam 18 degrees by 80 degrees. In a recent test it illumi nated the entire width of the! Mississippi, 1,028 yards, from an altitude of 500 feet. The il lumination level on the ground was intense enough to enable observers in.the aircraft to read “no fishing” and “no swimming” signs intended for surface traffic, according to the maker, Spectrolab of Sylmar, California. To accomplish the ultrawide beam, Spectrolab utilized a specially patented mirror that converts the 18 degree circular beam to the 18 by 80 degrees rectangular beam. TRY A HERALD FOB QUICK RESULTS Weekend Specials at D & M avIJVS On Orders ot (jam Super <xl Market %%? USDA Inspected FRYERS i27c FRYERS ™ 131 c FRESH GROUND Hamburger... 3 lbs - $1.17 GWALTNEY’S RED AND WHITE Sliced Pot Pies Bacon CHlCK tur^y K lb. 79c 6 for SI.OO Look What Your Dime Will Buy... Any One Item 26-oz. Box Red & White Salt Red & White Canned Potato Sticks 50 Count Box Red & White Pad Matches Red & White Cleanser l4-oz. Can 8-oz. Pocahontas Pork & Beans 8-oz. CampbeWs Tomato Juice 1-oz. Gold Medal Black Pepper J I A-oz. Pillsbury Butter-Tastin’ Biscuits 8-oz. Pillsbury Biscuits 12-oz. Zing Canned ■ Drinks Fishing lines By DICK WOLFF Pound lor pound, there are few fish the equal of a small mouth bass. By many sports men, he’s been called the poor fisherman’s trout, but most look upon smallmouth as all fun and the cause of a lot of fishing trips. About the only similarities between largemouth bass and small mouth bass is their last names and that they look a bit alike. From then on, everything Is different. The smallmouth bass is a fish of the northern portion of the eastern United States and southern Canada, from Ontario to New Brunswick. Unlike its southern cousin, the smallmouth likes colder and deeper water. Taking a smallmouth means putting the bait or lure where the fish is most likely to be. You can do it trolling or cast ing, depending on what suits you best. Starting from the beach, a spinning of bait casting outfit, like the new Garcia-Mitchell 510 reel on a 6%-foot (2581) light action, fast taper rod makes an ideal couple. It can easily handle 4 to 8-lb. monofilament and take a bottom-hugging lure like the Eelet or Finlandia down to the fish. If trolling from a boat is your preferred way of fishing, then you can troll the same outfit or better, match a Garcia Ambassadeur 1750 to a 6-foot, two-piece medium ac tion (2521) baitcasting rod. It will handle lines up to 15- lb test and lures up to %-oz. in weight. If you’ve got the spinning rod in the boat, cut the out board. With the wind in the right direction, make a drift parallel to the beach, casting onto the shore and working the lure deep toward the bottom. Let the lure fol low the contour of the bot tom as it deepens. Use a rood fish-fathometer combina tion. It will keep you direct ly over the 10 to 20-foot depth smallmouths prefer. I try all kinds of water for smallmouth bass and would be hard-put to say which method and conditions I like best. I might lean, however, to river fishing for bass where I can wade among the fish and work the rapids and cur rents in search of bronze backs. ""' One of my favorite rivers in the East, and probably the best smallmouth bass stream in the country, is the Dela ware River. With a fly rod, like the Garcia 8 Vi-foot, two-piece 2405 and a Garcia-Mitchell 710 automatic fly reel, loaded with plenty of backing and a B or D line, I can handle the fast sections of the river or reach with a bug or popper into the eddy on the other side of swift water. Large bass flies are some thing seldom seen or used in bass fishing today. Whether you spell the word “efficiency” or e-fish ency, a major oil company’s plant cleans up waste water so well that these fish thrive in it. Thanks to modern purification processing, water drawn from Puget Sound and used for cooling at Texaco’s nearby refinery is returned to the Sound in better condition. £ >v £' POLLUTION PROBLEMS The annual U. S. catch av erages approximately six bil lion pounds. The fish are utilized as follows: 35 per cent rendered, 30 per cent marketed fresh, 20 per cent canned, 10 per cent frozen and one per cent cured. Froz en fish products have been increasingly popular items. A 150 per cent increase in froz en fish sales over the next 15 years has been predicted. The U. S. consumption of fishery products has con tinued to rise. These increas ing demands, however, have been satisfied by import pro ducts. This increase in con sumption has been almost exclusively due to the popu lation increase. The U. S. per capita consumption of seafood products has remain ed at approximately 11 pounds per year over the last 20 years. A significant proportion cf the -, fisheries and shellfish processed is wasted. The per centage of each species wast ed ranges from 0 per cent for fish which are completely rendered (e. g. menhadden) tc 85 per cent for some crab (e. g. blue crab). The aver age wastage figure for all fish and shellfish is about 30 per cent. In addition to these large volumes of solid waste, significant waste water flows result from the but chering, washing and process ing of the product. The vol umes of solids in waste water vary widely with seafoods in processing methods. Using the 30 per cent fig ™il«BBBBBBaBB33gS §m, -M I 6 Mil] whitewal* tubeless 7 7C. it 77c. u ooc.ia »i.sF,d[. u.iut 'and tire ■ “All-WeatherE"Tires SIQ9S • Clean sidewall design, radial darts p'« « ?o to torn* aim Airing this Offer. on shouider j? 36 Fed l. but we will ot Happy to order ■■ Te. (depend,n, Kend*!»!!* * Triple-tempered nylon cord construction on s.re> end for future delivery of the merchandise • Buy now at these low prices ' oW ***• GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS® TIRES U **» -, • - . .. t . . . .J. Got fast, sura starts in all kinds of weather f trm“" Liberal Budget Terms — NEW Low Monthly Payments ISM Spitfire" orUseYour IbH vr Ibattery FITS MANY POPULAR CARS $ 4 95 ■BEBHHHH LeSsbrt '64-'66: uviTH TRADE IN Chevrolet fJ-'M •. cyl. 327 and 409; ■ XI T™ Sfar l I—M Ford ’%**64 (except 260 eng. 299 B K?lk.f 2 eng. std.) Mercury ‘56-*64 ell »td.: B SF?9NF ftontiec , SS-'66 ... end more Open Daily BA. M H to 5:30 P. M., Except Wednesday BA.M.toI P. M. I BOaUVEJSSt ISSKSf ! I .411 S. Bead J» Anno 482-2477 , ulemito i ure the total annual volume of solid waste generated in the seafood industries in the U. S. is roughly 1 2 billion pounds. A large portion of these waste is rendered for animal feed. The remainder is taken to municipal or priv ate disposal sites or discharg ed directly to adjoining wat ers. The pollutional strength per pound of fish waste has been estimated to be approxi mately one daily population equivalent. Using this fig ure and assuming that 50 per cent of fish waste as an aver age are rendered the popula tion equivalent of this indus try can be estimated to be two million people. The population equivalent of solid and liquid processing waste has been estimated to represent a population equiv alent as high as 3.6 million. These figures are deceptively conservative for a major seg ment cf the seafood produc tion takes place during short seasons intensifying the prob lem. The industry is not typified by a constant output month after month. The fish processing waste problem has become serious in areas. Waste treatment will be necessary in the fu ture to meet federal and state water pollution control regulations. Much conferring, planning and evaluating is now being conducted to see what research needs are in this area for the future and what can be done to help the industry to meet the new’ standards for tomorrow. Sincerely, DOC. ■firm,/ Tour I I n«r twWt. If! ■ ☆NO LIMIT! KOUTIZID IM.~ t*«n Dry ■ ■ TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS 1 J.I ■ SPECIAL OFFER! pM ONLY ■ (l■ Import JacketshjjmjH B Beautifully n 1 ||2iul£Uki9 W B n lea T, ?d llll'') EVERY HOUR ON THE HOUR ■ ■ Hangers M l T ues. thru sat. until i RJt.J Something.... Special ; | ' f 'aßßftl-AflF EMMel—■— 1 ; r ; I jsi ..ill ■g '^L 208 South Mosley Street Only because the owner has been pro ; moted to a position outside Edenton has ; this handsome Williamsburg Colonial ; home come on the market. ! The home has 3 bedrooms; V/> baths, ! living room with fireplace; dining room; j family room with fireplace; kitchen and ■ breakfast room; screened back porch; base j ment and beautifully landscaped lot. This is really something special avail able for immediate occupancy. j ; CONTACT Jack Habit 482-3715 482-2375 PAGE SEVEN-A
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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July 16, 1970, edition 1
7
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