Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
Conservation
By H. L. DAVIS
TAWAHASSEE — The 1961-
(52 wildlife harvest by hunters on
the 27 Florida Wildlife Manage
ment Areas exceeded all previous
harvest totals by considerable
margins.
Increases in bags were shown
for all species of game animals
apd birds, except wild hogs, with
out damage to basic wildlife pop
ulations, according to the Game
and Fresh Water Fish Commis
sion.
Management area harvest to
tals for the recently concluded
1961-62 season, as compared to
the previous season, Were as fol
lows:
Deer — 1961-62 total of 3,540
harvested, an increase of 688
over the 1960-61 total of 2,852.
^Turkey — total of 1,427 harvest
ed, an increase of 360 over the
1960-61 total of 1,067. Quail —
tolpl of 17,435 taken, an increase
of 13,472 over the 1960-61 total
of 3,963, when adverse weather
conditions cut down quail repro
duction on the South Florida
areas. Squirrel — harvest total
of 23,233, an increase of 10,110
over the 1960-61 total of 13,123.
Migratory bird harvest totals
alSo showed increases on the
management areas: Dove — 1961-1
62 harvest of 1,521, an increase!
of '778 over the previous season’s I
total of 743. Ducks — harvest of I
3,653 this season, an increase of <
1,708 over the 1960-61 total of!
1,945. Harvest of coots remained .
almost the same, with a 1961-621
total of 531, being an increase of
oaly 15 from previous year. !
.The only decrease in harvest
“Plum-Good” Pork Roast
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When the weather is nippy, what tastes better than rich roast
■ pork? The answer is simple: Roast pork with glistening “Purple
. . Thun Glaze.”
Extra heavy syrup from a can of luscious purple plums is com
bined with citrus fruits, dry mustard and instant minced onion and
gently thickened with cornstarch to make this simple but savory
glaze. After applying it to the meat—and how its tartness and
shimmer accent the flavor and color of pork!—add plums to the
sauce that’s left and garnish the roast with the juicy, burgundy
hued fruit.
Purple Plum Glaze
1 (1 lb. 15 oz.) can purple 1 teaspoon orange rind
plums in extra heavy 1 teaspoon dry mustard
syrup 2 teaspoons instant minced
1 cup syrup from plums onion
2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 tablespoon cornstarch
% teaspoon lemon rind *4 teaspoon salt
Drain plums. Blend all remaining ingredients in a saucepan.
Bri.ig to a boil and simmer a few minutes until thickened. Use
to glaze roast pork the last 15 minutes baking time. Add plums to
remaining sauce and serve with the roast. Makes about 1% cups
BAHCC. 1
F y Rice Stuffing
Terrific With Pork
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Try this delicious new rice stuffing with pork chops to perk up
appetites. Easy to make with packaged pre-cooked rice, it features
a medlew of flavors so friendly to rice. Pork chops taste espe
cially gSod with orange rice stuffing.
Rice and Orange Stuffing
*4 cup butter ox margarine 1 cup diced celery
*4 cup chopped onion I*4 teaspoon salt
I*4 cups packaged pre-cooked *2 teaspoon sugar
rice Vi teaspoon poultry seasoning
1 cup water 4 double rib pork chops
% cup orange juice (I*4 inches thick)
2 teaspoons grated orange
rind
Melt butter in saucepan. Add onion and saute until tender but
not browned. Add rice, water, orange juice and rind, celery, salt,
and sugar. Mix just to moisten all rice. Bring quickly to a boil
over high heat. Cover, remove from heat, and let stand 5 minutes.
Then add poultry seasoning and mix lightly with a fork.
To prepare chops: Cut a pocket in each chop and fill each with
% cup of the stuffing. Fasten edges with a small skewer or tooth
pick. Heat a tablespoon of fat in skillet, add chops and saute
quickly, turning to brown both sides. Remove from heat. Add *4
•cup boiling water, and cover tightly. Bake in moderate oven
(350°F.) one to I*4 hours, or until chops are tender. Place the
remaining stuffing in a baking dish and heat in oven. Serve with
the chops.
j totals was in wold hig, with 138
j being taken this season, compared
: to the 1960-61 total of 225.
j Florida’s wildlife harvest has
been increasingly annually for
the past 20 years, as more hunters
1 go afield each season, according
' to A. D. Aldrich, commission di
’ rector. Despite additional hunt
: ing pressures, however, Florida’s
deer population more than doub
-1 led during the decade from 1949
to 1959, showing an increase
from 36,675 to 97,225 deer. Flor
ida’s turkey population nearly
tripled during the same ten years,
from 25,780 to 74,765 wild tur
keys.
1 The Wheeler County Work Unit
' Office of the USDA, Soil Con
servation Service is one of 158
SCS field offices in Georgia that
has been designated as a radoi
logical monitoring station, ac
cording to an announcement by ।
C. W. Chapman, State Conserva- i
tionist, Soil Conservation Serv- ■
ice.
Mr. Chapman stated that equip-,
. ment for measuring radioactivity
has been issued to each of. these
158 field offices and local SCS
employees have been trained in |
I the use of this equipment.
The Soil Conservation Service
has been assigned responsibility I
for being prepared for radiologi-1
। cal monitoring of agricultural |
l lands and waters, crops stored;
I or harvestable on farms and live-|
I stock safety. Mr. Chapman stated j
1 that SCS employees will advise '
' farmers on how they might safe-'
, ly use their soil and water re
। sources in the event of any sig
nificant increase in radioactivity.
‘ Mr. Chapman continued that
the Soil Conservation Service !
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, WHEELER COUNTY, GEORGIA
; does not consider radiological I
. monitoring as an emergency job. j
This is another technical service ।
; furnished by the Soil Conserva- i
• tion Service in assisting farmers ‘
; in the wise use and management ।
; of their soil and water resources. ।
W. B. Bradley Os
Rentz Dies Saturday
Os Heart Attack
Funeral services were held in
Mt. Olivet Methodist Church
i Monday at 3 p.m. for W. B. Brad
' ley, prominent farmer of near
Rentz, who died unexpectedly
; Saturday afternoon. The Rev. H.
! C. Miller and the Rev. D. A.
I Price officiated, and burial was
I in the Zion Hope Cemetery with
i Townsend Funeral Home of Dub-
I lin in charge of arrangements.
; Mr. Bradley had spent the day
! with his daughter, Mrs. Louis |
■ Monfort in Mcßae, and suffered I
| a heart attack in his automobile ;
j before reaching his home near
I Rentz. He was pronounced dead
i upon arrival at a Dublin hospital.
Born in Carroll County on
July 31, 1887, he was first mar
ried to Miss Martha Hindman,
| who died in 1935. He was mar
iried later to Miss Lucille Spoon,
■ who survives him, and was a
; member of Mt. Olivet Methodist
| Church.
| Other survivors include six
;children: Sgt. 1/C Slayton Brad
l ley, of Killeen, Texas; Mrs. W.
F. Brown, of Helena; Mrs. Louis
' Monfort, of Mcßae; Mrs. Wayne
Davis, of Darien; Winston Brad
ley and Theo Bradley, of Rentz;
10 grandchildren and six great
grandchildren.
News Briefs From
। Emory University
! Cynic's View Confirmed
A statistical study of Emory
University freshmen shows what
a lot of cynics might have ex
pected all along. Women scored
higher in verbal areas than men.
On the other hand, men made
higher math scores on College
Board Aptitude tests than did
women.
Emory Leads South In
Training Pre-Meds
More students have received
pre-medical training at Emory ’
University in recent years than
at any other school in the South
east.
According to figures prepared
by the Association of American
Medical Colleges, Emory was in
i the top 25 schools in the country
'in each of the years tabulated:
1952, 1954, 1956, 1958 and 1960.
It was the only Southeastern
school to make the list consis
tently each of these years.
Emory Scientists Study
Causes of Dental Caries
“The tooth is an integral part
of the body—not like a stone
stuck in the jawbone. It has a
very intimate relationship with
the thyroid and salivary glands
as well as with the rest of the
body,” Dr. John Haldi at Emory
University says.
Dr. Haldi and Winfrey Wynn
I
Give Thanks, Too, For
Fresh Citrus Fruit
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Happily timed with holiday feasting is the arrival of the lus
> cious fresh Florida citrus fruits—grapefruit, oranges and tange-
1 rines. You will find these healthful citrus specials good from the
first to the last course of your Thanksgiving Day dinner.
For example, a bright, light appetizer combines grapefruit and
orange sections served in grapefruit shells and topped with a
dollop of sour cream. For a savory vegetable dish, combine the
I zesty tartness of fresh grapefruit sections with green beans which
have been cooked with a little onion, garlic, parsley, and rose
' mary or basil.
A surprise citrus trick is an orange turkey stuffing—a number
of good seasonings go into the stuffing along with orange sections
and the rind for mouth-watering moistness and flavor. Another
fresh idea is to top generous slices of oranges with prettily cut
out mounds of cranberry jelly as garnish for your turkey platter.
Orange Rice Stuffing
2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon poultry
*4 cup chopped onion seasoning
*4 cup chopped celery *4 teaspoon rosemary
*4 teaspoon Tabasco 2 teaspoons salt
2 cups cooked rice 2 teaspoons orange rind
3*4 cups toasted bread cubes 6 Florida oranges
Melt butter in skillet. Add onion and celery; cook until tender
but not brown. Stir in Tabasco. Combine onion, celery, rice, bread
j cubes, seasoning and rind. To section oranges, cut slice from top
and bottom; cut off peel round and round, spiral fashion. Go
over fruit again, removing any remaining white membrane. Re
move sections; cut each section in half. Add to rice mixture. Toss
lightly. Yield: Approximately 7 cups or enough for 8- to 10-
pound turkey.
lin Emory’s physiology depart
jment have studied the causes of
■ dental caries for fourteen years.
j “The occurrenee of caries
I seems to be tied into inherited
| metabolism,” Dr. Haldi says.
। While body metabolism and diet
| largely determine whether a per
son has few or many caries, den
tal decay itself is a disease pos
sible only in the presence of food
and bacteria.
The physical form of foods has
an effect on the increase of car
ies. It is not the sugar that mat
ters but its form. Sugar is no
worse than other foods and
TURBINE ENGINES
SOON MAY POWER i
MANY FAMILY CARS !
DETROIT—FamiIy passen
ger cars powered by the gas
turbine engine moved a step
closer to reality as Chrysler
Corporation weighed a decision
to build a limited number of
gas turbine powered passenger
cars for use by selected typical
motorists.
Announcement of Chrysler's
advance in the revolutionary
gas turbine field was made ।
jointly by Robert Anderson,
vice-president and director — I
Product Planning and George
J. Huebner, Jr., executive
engineer — Research, for the
automobile company.
They spoke at the start of a j
3,000-mile, five-day test evalu- '
ation run from New York to |
Los Angeles by a modified
1962 Dodge powered by a gas
turbine. In Los Angeles, the
Turbo Dart was joined by a
1962 Plymouth Turbo Fury,
also equipped with a turbine j ;
engine. Together, the cars be- |'
gan a tour from Los Angeles I'
to Cleveland, Ohio, for public I
display in dealer showrooms. ''
“The coast-to-coast Dodge ['
trip is one phase of a program
of evaluation we are taking
at Chrysler Corporation to
guide us in our decision — to
build a limited number of tur- i
bine powered automobiles and j
to place them in the hands of
typical motorists who will use 1
them under a variety of nor- ’
mal driving conditions,” Mr. j
Anderson said.
“On the basis of the public 1
interest shown in our turbine <
engine, and on the basis of our
own knowledge of the engine's
many advantagesand benefits, '
we believe a market for a <
turbine-powered automobile ,
may be possible.” ,
Mr. Huebner, who directs
Chrysler Corporation’s turbine f
development program, listed j
the following passenger car ,
gas turbine engine benefits.
The gas turbine has only
about a fifth as many part's 1
as the reciprocating engine, it <
runs smooth and practically
vibrationloss, it does not re
quire a distributor or breaker s
points, needs only one spark j
plug, and no oil changes. In t
addition, the Chrysler gas tur
bine has a clean, cool exhaust,
with no carbon monoxide and i
no unburned carbon. (
If built in a volume compar
able with a piston engine, tur- c
bine costs would be compar- i
able with those of piston en- c
gines, Mr. Huebner said.
Booklet information on the c
Chrysler-developed gas turbine c
is available to the general i
public at all local Chrysler, i
Plymouth and Dodge dealer
ships. Printed matter includes
turbine engine illustrations, i
diagrams of Chrysler- {
developed regenerative turbine
engine principle, engineering J
data and statements of the e
company’s program for the
development of the turbine
engine in future passenger car
production.
sweetened liquids have little or
no effect. Candy or anj' food
which clings to the teeth is very'
bad because it gives ever-present
bacteria a chance to work,
i
Klung
A combination heart-lung-kid
ney machine dubbed the “Klung” I
has been developed at Emory Un
iversity. Animals have been kept
on the machine for ten hours. ■
The “Klung” was designed by!
Emory scientists under the direc- j
tion of Dr. Pierre Galletti and:
by Knoxville surgeon Dr. Con- i
verse Pierce. Artificial heart
lung machines and artificial kid-;
neys have been used on animals!
previously but this is the first;
j time anyone has developed a;
i machine combining the two.
Fish Have MD Too
In a strange kind of cruelty ■
joke men and Siamese Fighting {
Fish are attacked by muscular i
dystrophy in almost exactly the
saime way, researchers in the I
Netherlands have found.
The chairman of Emory Uni- ’'
versity’s anatomy department, j'
Dr. Geoffrey Bourne would like '
to repeat the experiment but is :
involved in other M.D. study.
“M.D. seems to be a metabolic j'
disease of the muscles and con
nective tissues that is probably ;'
inherited,” he says. “We may ।
never be able to find a cure but 1
we would like to develop treat- i'
ment to control it as insulin does ' 1
diabetes.” I'
More Roads, Cars,
Drivers Add Up
To More Fatalities 1
j <
ATLANTA, (GPS) — More (
roads, more cars and more driv- j }
ers inevitably mean more traf-:,
sic accidents, more injuries and j (
more deaths. And since Georgia:,
will have more drivers operat-। ।
ing more vehicles over more:,
paved roads this year the inevit-; 1
able is expected. I •
“There may be as many as 100
to 150 more traffic deaths in
Georgia this year than last year ,
when the total exceeded the 1,- ,
000-mark”, declared Col. H. Low- r
ell Conner, director of the Geor- ।
gia Department of Public Safe- ,
ty. i
“We hope this doesn’t develop j
but when you figure it out with -
simple arithmetic it adds up that
way. Unless the drivers them- !
selves do their part in maintain- :
ing safety, the inevitable is bound
to happen.
‘While there will be more
roads, more cars and more driv
ers for us to police, the strength
of the State Patrol remains the
same, roughly 450 men. We’ll be
doing everything possible to hold
down accidents and resultant
deaths, but we can do only so
much with the personnel we
have.
“In the final analysis, the real
responsibility lies with the in
dividual driver. Accidents don’t!
just happen, they are caused. We
appeal to all drivers to face up
To Welcome New
-*>- ~r- <
A Pot Luck Housewarming Supper for the newcomers is the
finest way to insure good neighbors. One brings a big casserole
of Idaho’s famous Great Northern large white beans and lamb,
another makes her version of Caesar Salad. There will be hot
garlic-buttered French bread and someone’s relish tray specialty,
with a big chocolate cake and coffee for dessert. Paper napkins
and plates of course, to avoid the cleaning-up. The key? A wel
coming gift for the new home!
You will want to include the recipe when you take this
Beau and Lamb Stew, Idaho Style
Part 1
1 pound (2 and *4 cups) Idaho Great Northern large white
beans
5 cups water
Wash beans, add water. Bring to boiling point and boil 2 min
utes. Cover and allow to stand 1 hour. Beans may be soaked over
night but this is easier.
Part 2
2 pounds cubed lamb stew *4 teaspoon coarse-grind
meat black pepper
2 tablespoons or more 1 bay leaf
vegetable oil 1 diced large onion
1 fat clove garlic 2 cups carrots, cut in
mashed with 1-inch lengths
2 teaspoons salt 2 cups cold water
Brown lamb in vegetable oil. Add remaining ingredients. Bring
to boiling point, cover, and reduce heat to simmer, After 1 hour,
add beans with soaking water. Simmer 1 to I*4 hours or until
beans and lamb are tender. Add more water, hot, and seasonings
if necessary. Makes 6 hearty servings. Even better the next day,
though you likely won't have a chance to find out!
.to their responsibility and help
■us keep the traffic death toll
down. They can do it by obey
ing all traffic laws and driving
sensibly and carefully at all
■ times.”
Here’s what the record shows
for 1961 on drivers, vehicles and
■mileage: There were 2,018,384 li
censed drivers, an increase of
36,897 over the previous year; an
stimated 1,718,922 registered ve-i
hides, an increase of some 60,-
000, and a total of 17,269,953,710
miles of travel in Georgia, an in
crease of 385,663,113 miles. A
proportionate increase in each of
these categories is expected in
1962.
On top of that, many miles of
new highways will be added to
the Interstate System in Georgia
during the year.
Walter W. Barrett
Is Appointed To
Welfare Board
Walter W. Barrett, prominent
Mcßae business man, received
notice last week that the Georgia
Senate had confirmed his ap
pointment by Governor Ernest
Vandiver as a member of the
State Welfare Advisory Board.
Mr. Barrett served in the Sen
ate from the 45th Senatorial Dis
trict in 1959-60. He had the honor
of serving as the first president \
of the Mcßae Rotary Club, and
is president of the First Federal
Savings & Loan Association of
Mcßae.
FARROWING FACILITIES
The modern swine operation
needs some type of farrowing fa-1
cility where conditions can be
controlled. For example, the
house should be draft free during
winter months and have plenty
of ventilation during summer
months, says J. A. Christian, Ex
tension animal husbandman, Uni
versity of Georgia College of Ag
riculture. j
LIVESTOCK VALUE
Total value of livestock and
poultrj- on Georgia farms as of
January 1,1962, was $204,154,000.
This was 9 percent above the
total value on January 1, 1961,
which was $187,274,000, accord
ing to the Georgia Crop Report
ing Service.
William Howard Taft was the
first U.S. president to receive a
salary of $75,000 a year.
TF/Tr/E
WANT ADS
FOR FAST ACTION/
FRIDAY, MARCH 2,1962
Classified Ads
WANTED — White Ladies, Full
or Part-Time. No delivering,
collecting or investment. Have
fun, wear free jewelry. Call
3953 Vidalia or write Juanita
Dent, P. O. Box 172, Jesup,
Georgia. 46-3 i.
FOR SALE — One eight room
house and ten town lots, plus
plenty of out buildings. Large
yard, nice place for children,
garden, chickens, hogs, dogs or
whai-have-you. Priced right.
For more information see Lewis
Maddox, Alamo, Ga. Phone
LO 8-3731 or LO 8-2551. 27-<tf.
LONG TERM FARM LOANS —
Plans may be adjusted to meei
your individual needs. Mode
rate interest. Prompt closing.
Courteous and confidential
service. For full details, see or
write J. C. Bivins, Mount Ver
non, Ga. 13-if.
NEW WATKINS MAN
I'll be calling on you soon. Wait
for me and learn why it pays
io wait.
W. A. STEVENS
207 Marcus St.
Ph. BR 2-4317—Dublin, Ga.
FOR SALE
PIANOS
GRINDLE ELECTRIC COM.
PANY is having a giant sale on
all pianos. Just received a truck
load of Factory Rebuilt Pianos
going at rock bottom prices.
New Pianos at a big saving also
used pianos cheap. See us be.
fore you buy. Phone 2281.
j FEDERAL LAND BANK LOANS
for farmers in Toombs, Tatt
nall, Montgomery, and Wheel
er Counties are available
through the Federal Land Bank
Association of Vidalia. Loans
run up to 40 years. Can be paid
any time without penalty. Pro
ceeds can be used io buy land,
pay debts, make improvements,
or to finance almost any need
of the farm or family. For de
tails, see or write, E. O. Mc-
Kinney, Manager, P. O. Box
510, 309 East First Street, Vi
dalia, Georgia, or at the Court
House in Alamo, Ga. each Tues
day morning.
GEORGIA—-Wheeler County.
To All Whom It May Concern:
WHEREAS, Aulden Theo Gillis
has applied to the Court of Ordi
nary of Wheeler County, Geor
gia, for Letters of Permanent Ad
ministration upon the estate of
Jethro Gilder, deceased;
This is therefore to cite and
notify the next of kin and credi
tors of said Jethro Gilder, de
ceased, and all others whom it
may concern to be and appear
before said Court on the first
Monday in March, 1962, to show
cause, if any there be, why Let
ters of Permanent Administra
tion should not be granted to said
Aulden Theo Gillis on the estate
of said Jethro Gilder, deceased;
otherwise said Letters will be
granted as prayed by Aulden
Theo Gillis.
WITNESS my hand and official
signature this February 2,1962.
D. N. ACHORD, Ordinary' and
Ex-Officio Clerk, Court of
Ordinary of Wheeler
County, Georgia, 43-4 t.
GEORGlA—Wheeler County.
There will be sold at public
outcry to the highest and best
bidder for cash, before the court
house door in Wheeler County,
Georgia, on the first Tuesday in
March, 1962, the following de
scribed property, to-wit:
All of a stock of merchandise
located in that certain building
in the City of Glenwood and in
the county of Wheeler owned for
merly by the Estate of A. Segall
and fronting South on Railroad
Street and being known as Lot
Number 1 in Block 20 as shown
by a map of Glenwood, and be
ing the same building and the
same stock of goods where Max
L. Segall operated a mercantile
business until January 11, 1955,
and being the same building and ;
the same stock of goods where
Mrs. Robbie Murphy operated a
mercantile business from Janu
ary' 11, 1955, until February 3,
1962.
Said property now found in j
the possession of the Sheriff of 1
said county and is located in the 1
above described building, that is, |
in the building in the City of
Glenwood, Wheeler County, Geor
gia, where Mrs. Robbie Murphy
operated a mercantile business
from January 11, 1955, until Feb
ruary 3,1962. levied on to fore
close a Conditional Sales Con
tract, dated the 11th day of Jan
uary, 1955, between Mrs. Robbie
Murphy and Max L. Segall, and
to satisfy the Fi.Fa. in favor of
Max L. Segall against Mrs Rob
bie Murphy issued in the Super
ior Court of Wheeler County,
levied on as the property of de
fendant in Fi.Fa.
This sth day of February, 1962.
(s) MORRIS JOHNSON, Sheriff,
Wheeler County, Ga. 43-4 t.
GEORGIA, WHEELER COUNTY
I will sell before the courthouse
door of said County, between the
legal hours of sale on March 6,
1962, to the highest bidder for
cash, the following described
property to-wit:
One Cadillac Ambulance, mo
tor No. 487627860.
Said property will be sold as '
the property of W. D. and Mrs.
W. D. Palmer, to satisfy an at- ’
tachment issued from the Justice *
Court 393rd. District G.M., in |
favor of J. M. Hartley and against ,
W. D. and Mrs. W. D. Palmer. . .
This February 7,1962.
J. M. JOHNSON, Sheriff,
Wheeler County, Ga. 43-4 t. I