Wheeler county eagle. (Alamo, Ga.) 1913-current, February 28, 1936, Image 3
Mules For Sale I I I *1 i 1 OI t M ife I I dgjig^ I I LOCATED IN ALAMO I i Have plenty of real work mules on g I hand and will have at all times. If I I you are in the market for a good I I mule - Come around and look ft I them over. I I We will take HOGS, COWS and I I FEEDS on trades. I I J. L. PURVIS I I L. BERNSTIN I g ALAMO, GEORGIA g Mark Twain, Another Zephyr Train - Os Stainless Steel, Makes Its Debut ■y ■ daM "1 B?- — — — ~ ; The Mark Twain, a light-weight, stainless steel, diesel-electric train, has just been completed by the Edward G. Budd Manufacturing Company, of Philadelphia, for the! Burlington Railroad. It will replace [ two steam trains between St. Louis, i Mo., and Burlington, lowa. This new train, consisting of, four cars, including a baggage carj See Us For Stationery and railway postofflce, and having! seats for 92 passengers, will be the' Burlington's fourth stainless steel streamliner. It was built after the. I railroad had demonstrated the safe- i I ty, reliability and economy of light- > | weight construction in the opera | tion of its three Zephyrs which ’ have averaged under 34 cents a. | mile, less than half the cost of oper-1 WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA I ating a comparable standard train. The name Mark Twain was se- I lected because the train will run I through Hannibal, Mo., boyhood ■ home of the famous humorist I whose one hundredth anniversary j will be observed November 30. One : car is named Huckleberry Finn and ; another Torn Sawyer, after charac | ters in Twain’s books. -.-. fiUMMHMB GEORGIA MULES and HORSES We Raise Them. You Can Too. Come see our JACKS and Stallions Stud fees low Horseshoe Bend Farm Glenwood, Ga. I . Know Your Pork T By ” Jane Rogers FRESH; sauted | ' ROASTED CHOPS STEAKS STEAKS B ° I LED ROASTS ROASTS WITH nvi/xaia RROH pn ——— VEGETABLES B STEWED- BAKE0 D \ r- BRAISED broiled \ \^rrr , *i > Y soiled EN CASSEROLE ✓' I „ pnnK I (bawABOSTON\ V ——— " v \, /< Y— — ?y HAM V - T^SMRERiBsfpicNlA J PICKLED J\ \ BACON '^~X_ISHOUIDER> / / PICKLED belly /\ / boiled y -"'’jX/K OR FRIED I / s I ^yjrV J PKKLED BROILED rakph BOILED BOILED BAKED BAKED OR FRIED DUIUUU ROASTED STEAKS FOR THESE DISHES BUY THESE CUTS Deviled Pork Chops Chops C Breaded Pork Cutlets Shoulder .Baked Stuffed Spareribs Spareribs C earned Pork in Patties Lean Loin (use left-overs) Ro st Boston Butt Boston Butt PORK possesses a triple advan tage for the family menu. It is Inexpensive. It 1h delicious when properly prepared. It lends itself to preparation in a wide variety of appetizing ways. The most important secrets of pork cookery are to cook slowly and season wisely. In the latter connection, a small amount of sugar, usually used in combination with the salt, pepper and other seasonings, is of spot ’ value. In addition to developim e flavor of the meat, it forms succulent, crisp crust that adds illy to tho appetite appeal of th sh. The best pork cpmc . Tom young porkers/ The flesh a grayish white, fairly firm ana velvety in texture, and with a fine smooth grain. It should appear juicy, but not wet or watery, and should be SI,OOO to Carroll County Farmer i . i I I ■ I I ■ t-cs-cc-a ga ■ - f'&i ■ : Ta Director H. P. Stuckey (left) of the State Experiment Station, hands Mr. W. A. Nixon SI,OOO, his first prize in the American v Nitrate of Soda Crop Contest. w In Carrollton, Carroll County, where last summer the members of the Georgia Press Association were most regally entertained, a big banquet was recently held to I celebrate the fact that Mr. W. A. Nixon of that community had won the SI,OOO first prize In the Amer ican Nitrate of Soda Crop, Contest and four other farmers in the county had won smaller awards. The SI,OOO check, which Mr. Nixon will use to pay off his mort gage, was presented by Director H. P. Stu'key of the Experiment Station w Many Georgia notables sent congratulations by telegraph. “Congratulations and good Wish- ■ well marbled and covered with a white, smooth, firm fat, free from fibres. In the older animals, the flesh turns to a delicate rose color. Deviled Pork Chops Mix together 1 tablespoonful of chill sauce, 1 tablespoonful of sugar, Vs teaspoonful of dry mus tard, teaspoonful of paprika, a teaspoonful of salt and 1 table spoonful of lemon juice. Add if liked, a teaspoonful of Wor cestershire sauce. Pan broil lean pork chops on one side only, then gash them slightly on both sides and cover with tho sauce. Cover and finish cooking, turning now and then. Make a mound of mashed potatoes and arrange the chops In pyramid form about them.® Serve very hot with the sauce poured about the mound. , es to you,’’ telegraphed Governor i Eugene Talmadge, "Delighted to i know you won American Nitrate i of Soda $5,000 Crop Contest. Am > proud of you and glad this honor ■ has come to Georgia and Carroll 1 County. More power to you and the other four county winners.” ; U. S. Senator Richard B. Russell, Jr. sent his “heartiest congratula tions,” adding, “The farmers of old ’ Carroll County are hard to beat any • way you take them.” Harry L. Brown, Director of Ex i tention, mentioned In his telegram . the “Successful operation of your - farm indicated by this recognition," 1 w w Handy Pies A PUMPKIN pie is a mighty handy thing to have around during the holidays, even If you aren’t a movie comedian. People do other things with pump । kin pies besides plastering them all over other people’s faces, you know-. So here’s a good way to make a simple Country Pumpkin Pie: Smooth one-half cup cottage cheese, or pass it through a sieve, then mix with one and a third cups canned pumpkin. Mix two-thirds cup sugar with two-thirds teaspoon salt, two-thirds teaspoon ginger, two-thirds teaspoon cinnamon and one-fourth teaspoon nutmeg, and add with two beaten eggs and one and a third cups milk. Heat In a double boiler and pour Into a pie tin lined with pastry. Bake, hav ing oven hot, 450 degrees, tor first ten minutes, then reducing It to 325 degrees for remaining time, about thirty minutes or until a knife Inserted comes out clean. This makes one pie. Or Else It you’re feeling dressy, you can doll up a pumpkin pie so that its country cousin wouldn’t recognixe it on the table. It you feel that way about it, try this Pumpkin Pie with Marshmal lows: Add two-thirds cup sugar, one-fourth cup dark molasses, one halt teaspoon salt, one-half tea spoon cinnamon and one teaspoon ginger to two cups canned pump kin (or half the contents of a No. 3 can). Add two beaten eags, one cup milk and one-halt cup cream, and heat In double boiler. Pour Into tin lined with pastry and bake at 450 degrees for ten minutes, then at 325 degrees for thirty minutes or till set. Cut twelve marshmallows in halves and lay over top. Return to oven until marshmallows are brow nod. Makes one large pie.* * — Getting a Job and Getting Ahead By Floyd B. Foster, Vocational Counselor, International Correspondence Schools Work Beyond Your Job C ONCE you have obtained a job, the attitude you take toward it right at the start is going to be vitally important. Many men are immediately content to begin drift ing along with as little effort as possible, with little definite thinking about the present and less plan ning for the future. « Other men begin working them selves into a fever and think that just because they work hard and heatedly they are certain to suc ceed. They fail utterly to realize that the only kind of work that produces real success is that which is directed by a soundly conceived and organized plan of action. The wisest plan for a young man starting in on his career, is to work always a little beyond his present job. As soon as you have mastered the particular job you were hired to do, begin to pioneer into new territory. Find out what the men immediately ahead of yojr do and how they do it. Then, by study, by observation, and by taking every opportunity to Kain experience in some phase of their work, equip yourself as far as possible so that you could handle their jobs. r If you equip yourself to do the work of those who are a few steps ahead of you on the road to suc cess you can depend upon it that opportunities to prove your greater value will not be lacking. In the certain nature of things, vacancies will occur or emergencies will arise which will give you the opportunity to show what you can do—and it is to those who prove they can do more than they were hired to do that promotion surely comes.' SALVE OOD for COLDS LIOUID-TABLETS SALVE-NOSE PRICE DROPS sc, LOo, 25 Centuries-Old Ring A 1,000-year-old gold ring was found In a field near Torneby, Sweden, on H e Swedish island of Oland In the Baltic sea. It appears to be a dupli cate of a ring found In almost the same spot a number of years ago. The ring is in good condition, In spite of its great age, and has been turned over to the government historical Mb wum to Stockholm.