Newspaper Page Text
16-A
.. The Summerville News, Thursday, May 22, 1986
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Armed Forces Day Parade Grand Mar
shal Duff Matson is pictured with his
family at a dinner at the Chattooga Coun
ty Memorial Home Friday. Left to right
are Phillip Short, brother of Matson’s
Darden’s Bill Seeks Fair Value For
Use Of Federal Lands For Grazing
Seventh District Con
gessman Geor;se “Budd{"
arden has introduced legisla
tion requiring ranchers who
Fraze their animals on federal
ands to pay user fees com
parable to those charged by
private landowners.
Darden, a member of the
House Committee on Interior
and Insular Affairs, already
has gained 11 co-sgonsors for
his bill, The Public Rangelands
Fee Act of 1986. He said its
adoption would eliminate an
unfair advantage some
Western ranchers now have
over their neighbors and vir
tually all Eastern livestock
farmers. It also would increase
the federal fovernment’s in
come by at least s3l million
over three years and help
reduce the federal deficit, he
said.
“Right now, the federal
government charfies $1.35 per
animal, ?er month for grazin
on its land,” Darden sai(f
“That produces revenues of
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$lB million annually.
“But the annual cost of
maintaining that land is S7O
million — meaning the govern
ment loses $52 million every
year.”
Darden pointed out that in
the West — where most graz
ing on federal land occurs —
ranchers using private land
pay an average of $6.25 for
their firazing rights. “The bot
tom line is that the federal
government is subsidizing
some ranchers,” he said. ‘“The
policg' is particularly unfair to
ranchers outside the West,
because they generarllJ do not
have access to federal land.
“The higher Erazing fees
also will help alance the
federal budfiet. ' Darden noted.
Recent budget deficits have
been about S2OO billion annual
ly, but the Gramm-Rudman-
Hollings law passed last
Decemger requires a balanced
buqlget by 1991.
he grazing bill is based on
a recommendation made two
daughter-in-law; wife Gloria; son Arthur;
Matson; daughter-in-law Sally; and son,
Duff Matson Jr., Sally’'s husband. Photo
by Earl McConnell.
g_lars ag’cby the President’s
ivate Sector Survey on Cost
Control, commonly known as
the Grace Commission after its
chairman, industrialist Peter
Grace. Darden is chairman of
the natural resources task force
of the House Grace Commis
sion Caucus, which seeks to im
plement the panel’s
recommendations.
It has been estimated that
implementation of the Grace
Commission’s 2,500 separate
recommendations coukr save
the federal government $424
billion over three years.
Field Day
Olympics
Conducted
“Senior Citizens Ol ics”
was held in LaFayette *ues
day, May 13. Five nursinf
homes were re{resente i
Shepherd Hills, LaFayette;
Lal‘Payette Health Care;
Rossville Convalescent Center;
Fort Oglethoree Nursing
Home; and Oak View Nursing
Home.
From Oak View Nursing
Home there were four residents
that participated in the games.
They were Jimmy Norton,
Naomi Hurley, C. B Hufihes
and Charles lg"rost. Lisa Hall,
the Activities Director; and
Lynn Aimee accompanied the
residents to LaFayette.
The different fetes that
were prepared for the residents
to take part in were:
Wheelchair races, speed walk
ing, ball throwin% contest,
checkers, basketball free
throw, table tennis, bowling,
horseshoes and dancing.
From Oak View, éharles
Frost won second place in the
wheelchair race and second
place in the table tennis. Jim
mp);el(;lortor_l won dfirst p}iac(le in
8| walkm%an second place
in bowling. These were great
honors for the residents. ,
Everyone had a great time
and are?'ooking forward to the
next “Otl{mpics.” The
residents and staff at Oak View
are real proud of these people.
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Guest Column
Memorial Day B CONGRESSMAN GEORGE
The celebration of Memorial Day on
the last Monday in May only in recent
years has become a major event in much
of the South. But the custom of setting
aside a day to honor our war dead actual
ly has its roots in our region.
Because the Civil Wg raged across
their own land, Southerners were acutely
aware of the great sacrifices of both Con
federate and Union soldiers. The slain men
of both sides were honored by Southern
women, who strew flowers over the graves.
The holiday first known as Decoration
Day was born. It was celebrated April 26
in Georgia and a few other Southern
states, and on other Spring dates
elsewhere in the region.
Northerners were touched by news of
this simple but sincere expression of love
and gratitude, and the hope it offered for
reconcilliation between North and South.
In 1868, three years after the Civil War's
end, an order designating May 30 as a time
for decorating the graves of war dead was
issued by General John A. Logan, Com
mander in Chief of the Grand Army of the
Republic.
State legislatures throughout the
North gradually took up the tradition.
May 30 eventually became a federal holi
day, and the observance was widened to
include honors for the dead of later
American wars. Southerners, however,
continued to stage their own observances
earlier in the Spring.
Recent years have brought the end of
many long-standing differences between
North and South. That growing unity is
350 Georgians Report AIDS
Since ’81; 223 Of Those Die
Of the 350eJ)ersons in
Georgia diagnosed with AIDS
since 1981, 223 have died, ac
cording to a re%ort released by
the Georl'aa epartment of
Human sources Office of
Epidemiology.
Of the cases reported as of
March 1986, 274 occurred in
homosexual or bi-sexpal men
and 29 in intravenous drug
users. In the 47 other cases,
epidemiologists were unable to
Tips For Town And
Country Living
By Ted Clark-Extension Agent
THRIPS AND SPIDER
MITES — COMMON
ROSE PESTS
Several sg‘ecies of thrips at
tack roses. They feed on the
tender flower parts causing the
petals to become flecked and
discolored and the flowers
deformed. The adult flower
thrips are tiny, slender,
brownish-yellow insects with
featherlike wings. They are ex
tremely active, especially dur
ing the months of May and
June. If you examine an in
fested blossom, you'll see the
tin{ thrips scurrying for
shelter at the base of the
petals. Several generations oc
cur during the summer. In ex
tremely hot, dry weather they
exemplified by the decreasing focus on
April 26 in the South, and its replacement
by the national Memorial Day as a time
to remember personal sacrifice in war. Of
course, the exact date of the national
observance now varies, falling on the last
Monday in May in order to provide a three
day weekend.
It has been more than a decade since
the United States fought a conventional
war. Still, there have been losses to mourn
— in the undeclared war with terrorists.
Scores of Americans have died at the
hands of terrorists who bombed airports
and diplomatic posts. There were the 239
U. S. Marines killed as they slept. at their
Beirut- headquarters in 1983. There was
Robert Stethem, the Navy diver killed in
cold blood by terrorists aboard TWA
Flight 747 last summer. There was Leon
Klinghoffer, shot in his wheelchair aboard
the cruise ship Achille Lauro a few weeks
later.
More recently, we lost two Air Force
fliers — Capt. Fernando Ribas — Dominic
ci and Capt. Paul Lorence — during the
retaliatory air strike against terrorist
strongholds in Libya.
On this Memorial Day, we will continue
our long tradition of honoring the 580,000
American men and women slain in conven
tional wars. But we should take special
note of those who have died — whether in
uniform or simply as ordinary Americans
— in the continuing battle against the bar
baric forces which continue to threaten the
peace of the civilized world.
determine how the patient con
tracted the disease.
Based on the report, per
sons most likely for contrac
ting the disease continue to be
in the high risk groups.
Since AIDS is primarily
transmitted through intimate
sexual contact and the sharin,
of contaminated needles, DHfi
advises person in the high risk
groups to follow certain prac
complete a life cycle in less
than two weeks. To reduce the
population, cut off and dispose
of all blooms that have passed
their ?Irime. Do not throw
mt owers on the ground.
ips will quickly leave such
blooms and go to unopened
buds on other plants.
Spider mites are minute
pests that suck plant juices
thus seriously stunting rose
growth, Mites often do con
siderable damage before they
are noticed. They live on the
undersides of leaves where
they are somewhat protected
from the elements and often
are not reached by chemical
sprays. Heavy infestations
result in a “‘dusty”’ aggearance
to the foilage. Rubbing the
underside of the leaves against
a white sheet of pafier is a prac
tical means of checking for
mites. If mites are present,
streaks will be noticeé) on the
paper.
The insecticide dimethoate
(Cygon or Defend) is effective
in reducing the populations of
both mites and thrips on roses
if applied at weekly intervals.
It is important that you direct
the spray on the underside of
all leaves as well as the upper
surface.
ROSE FERTILIZATION
Roses need light but fre
guent apKlication of fertilizer
urinfimt‘ e frowing season.
Many kinds of fertilizers can be
used successfully. A general
gurgose fertilizer such as an
-8-8 or 10-10-10 analysis will
give good results. If one of the
analysis is used approximate
ly %4 cup per plant every 4-6
weeks is usually adequate.
Reduce the rate to 2 tables
poons per agglication for
recently planted rose bushes
(until mid-summer). Spread the
fertilizer evenly underneath
and slightly outside of the
foliasg mass. A t,horoufh
watering immediately after fer
tilization will make it more
readily available and also
reduce the danger of burning.
It is not necessary to remove
the mulch before applying the
fertilizer.
SYNTHETICS
In fabric blends, adding
synthetic fibers will improve
I{rongth. improve wash and
wear characteristics, minimize
shrinking or stretching and
add luster or sheen. That's ac*
cording to Georgia Extension
Service home economists.
tices to reduce their risk of con
tracting the fatal disease.
Practices to be avoided in
clude: Sexual contact with
many partners, anal inter
course with a member of a high
risk groui, sexual contact with
a person known to be infected
and sharing needles when us
ing drugs.
Dr. Keith Sikes, Director of
DHR’s Office of Epidemiology,
says, “‘Since AIDS is not easi
ly tragsnfit{,‘ed, it hzfi not li'let
spread to the gener a
tl%n. However,gx:dividlf:lg not
in the high risk groups should
still exercise caution in their
sexual and needle use prac
tices.”
The presence of the AIDS
virus is detected through a
blood test. Confidential testing
is offered by DHR at 10 sites
throughout the state. To find
out the location of the sites, in
dividuals should contact their
county health department or
call the AIDg hotline,
1-800-551-2728.
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Summerville ' Hours: Monday Through
Phone 857-1012 | Saturday 9:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m,