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PAGE SIX
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER 21, 1961.
Wildlife Leaders
Arrested for Dove
Shoot Violations
ATLANTA—Two officials of the
Georgia Wildlife Federation were
arrested during the past weekend
on charges of shooting doves over
a baited field near Savannah, offi
cials reported Monday.
Charged with misdemeanors were
Carl W. Quantee, 45, a federal di
rector, and W. S. Robinson, 47, a
Region Four vice president, both of
the Isle of Hope.
The State Game and Fish Depart
ment reported the two were among
five men arrested for shooting over
a freshly baited field on Burnt Pot
Island, east of Savannah.
Evidence on Snake
Handling Offered
In Trial of Pastor
Cotton and Peanut
Harvest in State
At Peak This Week
TeRM'N*-* c THE IERMI'ie./
LOVE YOUR MOUSE SO MUCH,
THEY COULD JUST EAT IT. UNFORTUNATELY
FOR YOU THEIR DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
IS DESIGNED TO THRIVE ON WOOD THE
STRUCTURALLY IMPORTANT PORTION
OF YOUR HOUSE. THEY ARE ABLE
TO DIGEST WOOD BECAUSE OF THE
PROT07A (microscopic AN/MALS)
IN THEIR STOMACHS.TERMITES // ^
ALSO DESTROY CROPS AND
STORED GOODS.
o
v
i
&
i
CAN BE 6AINED PROM AN APPLICATION OF A CHEMICALLY STABLE
INSECTICIDE IN THE SOIL-SUCH AS ALDRIN- BEFORE OR DURING
CONSTRUCTIONOFTHEHONIE. AFTER 10 YEARS OF EXTENSIVE
TFSTING BY STATE AND FEDERAL LABORATORIES ALDRIN SOIL
TREATMENT IS STILL 100% EFFECTIVE AGAINST TERMITES. <
@>1961 • Shell Chemical Company • t
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GAME
AND
FISH
By FULTON LOVELL
Many more Augusts may pass before another
one surpasses 1961.
It was a month filled with fishing thrills, from
the fabulous seige of good fishing in Lake Lanier
and Allatoona to the mossy shores of Seminole,
where bass worked over many topwater plugs under
a full moon.
All in all, the entire summer was a tremen
dous fishing success. For once, fault finders
cannot blame poor summer fishing ®n Georgia’s
legal sale of black bass. Fishing was far from
poor this summer.
Baxley McQuaig of Homerville established a new
world’s record for jaekfish with a battler that ex
ceeded the old record by two ounces.
And up in Alaska, Atlantan Roy Warren
brought fame to his home city and State land
ing what is believed to be a new sockeye salmon
record. Fishing with a delegation from Atlanta
that included outdoor columnist John Martin,
Warren’s catch has been submitted to Field
and Stream for verification.
Albany angler Charlie Tyson took a battered
topwater lure and boated a 15 pound bass from Lake
Seminole after a struggle you read about in outdoor
magazines. A few days later, Tyson topped his own
mark with a 15 pound, two ouncer from the same
lake.
While Warren was busy in Alaska and Tyson
was assaulting Seminole’s bass population, many
Georgians reduced the ocean’s tarpon population
by a few.
The tarpon run was good this year, as witnessed
by the number of catches reported.
But with success came gloom.
Late August brought on the duck forecast, which
again offers little for Georgia hunters to look for
ward to. A reduction in the bag limit was an
nounced by the Department of Interior. At the
writing of this column, Georgia’s season has not
been set but chances are it will be one of short
duration.
Outdoor columnist Bill Alleh, who is presi
dent of the Georgia Sportsmen’s Federation
and a real conservationist, will be sending this
column information from Canada concerning
the duck situation and we will pass it on to you
as we get it.
Allen is on his annual trek to the north country
to report on bird dogs for a national magazine. He
has proven a very reliable source for duck informa
tion in the past.
... ® ove season is but a few days away. Un
like the waterfowl situation, dove hunters have
every reason to expect some good early shoot
ing in north Georgia and better shooting fur
ther south as the season rolls along.
First half of the state’s split season opens Sept.
15 and goes through Oct. 14 with the second period
opening Dec. 7 and closing for good Jan. 16.
NASHVILLE, Ga—A 41-year-old 1 ATHENS, Ga., Sept. 13 — Condi-
father of four daughters yelled tions for fall harvest and other
“Hallelujah and Thank the Lord!” farm activities improved i<n most
when he was bitten fatally by a areas of the state as weather be-
rattlesnake during a faith ceremony came more favorable, the Georgia
last year, an eyewitness to the inci- ' Crop Reporting Service reports,
dent testified last Wednesday. County agents reported that cot-
A. B. Connell, the witness who j ton and peanut harvest is increas-
also is a snake handler, testified ing in volume after being delayed
those were the words of Lloyd Hill by excessive rains. Farmers also
when a rattler bit his hand as he are making better progress in the
took the poisonous reptile from a ' preparation of land and the seed-
Church of God 56th
Annual Assembly
Draws 10,000 Persons
COPPER HILL, Tenn., Sept. 13 —
The 56th annual assembly of the
Church of God of Prophecy began
box Aug. 27, 1960.
Hill died a few hours later.
Charles H. Hall, 62-year-old resi
dent of Fort Payne, Ala. is on trial
in Berrein County Superior Court
for murder in the death of Hill.
Hall was pastor of the New River
Holiness Church in northwest Ber
rien County at the time Hill was
bitten.
ing of winter pastures, small grains
and cover crops.
However, scattered showers par
ticularly in south Georgia, continue
to limit harvesting operations and
to increase damage previously done
to cotton and peanuts in those wet
areas.
The condition of cotton shows
no appreciable change from the
A 12-man jury, 6 church members \ preceding week with most reports
and the other half not affiliated 1 about equally divided between fair
with, a church, began deliberating j and good. Boll rot is reported in
Hall’s fate late last Wednesday several areas. Harvest has advanc-
following a trial of eight hours.
In an unsworn statement, Hall
told the jury two snakes were in
a box at the church during the ser
vice.
As pastor, Hall said he warned
the congregation that anyone who
handled snakes must be “right
with their God.”
“I said here are some serpents”,
Hall said he told the congregation.
"I’m responsible for all of you
from the front to the back (in the
church).
Woman Enjoined
For Dental Practice
ed considerably.
here Tuesday at the Fields of the
Woods Burger Mountain, where the
church was founded in 1912.
Some 10,000 persons from 48 stat
es and 14 foreign countries gather
ed here to begin their annual
week’s meeting. After a baptismal
service and several speakers, they
traveled to Cleveland, Tenn., to be
gin their week’s activities.
COOPERATION
SCORES ON THE
PARTY LINE, TOO
Edenfield Enters Race
In Thomaston
Macon, Ga. Sept. 14—A Jefferson
woman accused of conducting a
general dental practice for years past three years he has been mayor
THOMASTON — Councilman John
Edenfield has declared he will de
finitely run for mayor of Thomas
ton in the forthcoming primary.
At this point it appears he will
oppose Mayor Harvey Greene, who
has said he will run, while leaving
the door open to change his mind.
Edenfield operates Tom’s distri
butorships in Thomaston, Griffin
and Carrollton and is in the food
vending business.
He has been elected to city coun
cil for three terms, and will serve
out his sixth year Dec. 31. For the
without ever attending a dental
school has been enjoined from prac
ticing dentistry without a license,
Georgia Dental Association head
quarters here reported Thursday.
Judge Richard B. Russell III gran
ted the injunction sought by the
State Board of Dental Examiners a-
gainst Marie Pirkle after hearing
testimony of several witnesses at a
hearing in Jackson Superior Court
in Jefferson Wednesday.
The witnesses, Mrs. Jack Scott,
Mrs. Ned Stringer and Howard Hill,
all of the Jefferson area, said Miss
Jirkle had extracted teeth, drilled
and installed fillings and perform
ed nearly all of the usual acts of
dental practice.
Sautee Medic Gets
Post at Alto
pro-tem and has served two years
as chairman of the city’s finance
committee.
Accident Delays
CD Workshop
THOMASTON, Ga. Sept. 16—The
first aid course at the Civil Defense
Home Preparedness workshop was
not carried out as planned.
Mrs. Carlton Colquitt, the nurse
who was scheduled to conduct the
first aid course, suffered a broken
foot in a fall at her home over
the weekend.
The frequently unsung hero of a football game is the
blocking back. He is the fellow who makes it possible for
the flashing runner to get away and score that touchdown.
While it doesn’t require as much energy on the tele
phone party line, cooperation pays equal dividends. By
using the line sharingly everyone gets a bigger share of
better telephone service ... including you. Try it yourself
and see.
Public Service
Telephone Company
jr
jiiiiiir
A Sautee physician, Dr. Austin J.
Walker, has been named fulltime
physician and surgeon at the Geor
gia Industrial Institute at Alto, Cor
rections Director Jack Forrester an
nounced Saturday.
Mr. Forrester also said construct
ion of a $300,000 academic school >
school building at the institution, j
begun this week, will provide
schooling under certified teachers
to the some 630 boys now housed
there.
The corrections official said there
has been a virtual elimination of
illiteracy among inmates at the
school during the past year.
Crisp County Sets
$4,000 Whiskey Fee
CORDELE, Ga., Sept. 13 — The
Crisp County Commission recom
mended this week that liquor li
cense fees be set at $4,000, with a
special $1,000 fee for private clubs
if they meet certain conditions.
Georgia’s Peach
Growers To
Discuss Organization
The president of the Georgia
Peach Council, Edgar Duke of Fort
Valley, said last Wednesday the
directors of the council plan to meet
this week to discuss the possibility
of growers’ organizing under the
Commodities Promotion Act.
Mr. Duke, who attended a meet
ing of the Senate Government Ope
rations Committee, said the meet
ing is tentatively planned for
Thursday in Macon.
Medicine’s ‘Image’
Ailing Now?
Few sciences have made greater
strides in recent decades than medi
cine.
Yet some of its very triumph?
have generated new problems, anc
some doctors believe their public
image is ailing.
Their presicription:
More emphasis on the humar
equation.
ATTENTION MAN OR WOMAN
Serve Consumers with Rawlelgt
products in Taylor County. Mus
have desire to earn $100 per weel
and up. See H. C. Allen, Molena
or write Rawleigh’s Dept. GAH
810-27, Memphis, Tenn.
Open House
Murray Casket Company
Butler, Georgia
Located On Old Mauk Road, West Side Butler
In the City Limits
SEPT. 22 THROUGH SEPT. 30
We Invite You to See Our Display of
Caskets and Inspect Our New
Manufacturing Plant
Murray Casket Company
BUTLER, GEORGIA
Phone UN 2-5532
JAMES MURRAY Jr., Prop.