Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Nov. 22, 1973, edition 1 / Page 7
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| EZOSZ *JSgix~ ys. : . ' SSL 9 !fi. ? #f %,^ I ^ ^ M a ;M ' ' kk ?y "I?.I??- *T5^~ i ? Wwm''JSMatfip ' mk' '.*4 #?> > '? f?' ? $M >? 3$teferrsrsssp? Lf" ?_l.j . Washington?(HK)- The meat industry has instituted a new standardized identification label ing program designed to reduce shopper confusion and help con sumers make wiser, more econ omical decisions. "* President David H. Stroud of of the National Live Slock and ,j,. Meat Board said the new pro gram promises benefits for the marketer as well as the con sumer. The names for various cuts of beef, pork and lamb sold in VJS. food stores have been reduced from more than 1,000 to about 300. Fanciful, strictly regional or x potentially misleading names have been replaced by others with more specfflcMmejusing to ' Ml'"?[f(iirilairiifi IiiiTI'Ti il booklet* for distribution through retail meat outlets. The National Live Stock and Meat Board, on industry asso elation, coordinated the volun tary 16-month project among producers and retailers. Stroud said that "me new nationwide system may he the most signif icant meat counter improvement since the introduction of self service nearly four decades ago " Consumer Benefit* Among consumer benefits ex pected from the new system is a guarantee that such vaguely named or misnamed meat cuts as "London Broil". "Paradise JjUxusT^nd ^"Patio Roast" will A i & ' lift*.: .. are called- "The name list seem ed endless," Stroud added. "It hat proliferated to awesome pro portions. particularly since the end of World War II. The mer chandising ingenuity of the ex tremely competitive meat retail ing business is partly respon sible. "Bin once this new system gets into full operation, each cut will carry the same name wher ever you buy It in the country." Not only will the names on the meat package labels be uni form throughout the U.S., but most stores participating in the program will display illustrated identification charts, plus Other descriptive material on the new recommendations. UwTtoth^ma!u^Lx^Utedk "b2 ifawttdT JIL, ^*vSulfe AMlSI^t' K tually living in ttoe refuge, he jMont know where to find "Used to be, whee I eaw illegally fieNhg e trout stream, I could drive up to the refuge protector'* house and tell him about it, now, 1 dont realty know how to get in touch with these fellows." That's the problem, in a nutshell. Of course, not every outdoorsman will report game and fish violations when he seas than but the really con cerned will. And they have bean a big help in maintainihg the quality of theee areas, hi order to con tinue to help, they've got to have a contact. Now, the midlife Com _ ? ? _j . ?,m?i.|nj _ peign to heSfa^aportsmoo brio themselves by taooina into the wildlife protection Five "Hotline"**::elephonf numbers: one for Morgsntoo (704-427-SllT) one for JonooviDe (019 MB SOS), for Waynesville (704-496-9292), Haw River (919479-U4I) and China Grove (704-987-9186) have been est up. Theee an Wildlife Commission base I Stations and they an in coo tact, by radio, with all the I i iirit iRiSa , ?? , a. wiiaiiie rTotectors m tnat area. If a hunter aeee eomeooe Protector s home or ?0 ftiiri rf 50.000 acres oI wilderness. Instead, he can call the nearest of these live "hotline" retayea to vviiaiire irotocuir* , It wotdd besgood Idas to lot the back of your hwrting license ritfit now, But, tat ease you forget, been thelookout for Several thousand of these now throughout the deer bTuSsnr^Md the western Basically, they tell you where to call to get help If you see a violation or know of one. Also, at 21 strategic points - locations to be announced shortly - Wildlife Game Land I personnel win he stationed in tracks equipped with radios. The agents manning these tracks w!B be at these locations primarily so that sportsmen can report vislutione. These man wifl also serve as Wildlife Oooperators Agents during the As with the telephone net work, once a report is received, the information will be relayed to the Wildlife Protectors patrolling the area. I ?'-"'11 I Ml "u A VA v v;! ' ? ;' * - *3$ *? .*:^j ? hunter if phtasant will rain a Lrn,. _?A brows, puft Otlt niJj cn^ckb anu swear up and down that pheas ?tt are the worat miners of ?6od bird dop ever created," says Gund Dogs Editor Jerome 8. ticularly wily old rooeters, will habitually ran away from points and ruin a good quail-dot: - staunchness on game. But if you live in an area where both quail and pheasant reproduce natural ly, it seems that the tail is wan ing the dog when bird-dog owners let a theoretical argu ment prevent them from fully enjoying the natural bird hunt ing which could be thciri. Jack Roche of NeoSho Falls, I Kansas, agrees. "That's just some scaredy-cat theory that was probably spread by hunters who did more of their hunting teJ books than in the field," he says. "A good bird dog is good on whatever game he has had enough experience on. Quail and pheasant, pheasant and quail, it ioesn't matter, the dog can tmell 'em, and he knows what lie's got ahead of him, I'f he's Men trained on both birds, he tnows how to handle either >ne." :f The point is a good one, and lack Roche puts his money vhere his mouth is. "My dogs go back and forth between quail and pheasant all day long, and 111 guarantee I've never seen a running pheasant make them I forget how to handle a covey of quail. Come out and have a look." Kansas is fantastic bird coun try. Booming populations of pheasant reproduce naturally rverywhere but in the southeast rorner of the state, and quail :ountry is statewide. A Kansas sird dog that could not properly tandle both species of birds vould be giving his owner only ulf a job, no mdtter how good le might be on that half. Furthermore, Kanaas is dotted with public-hunting and game-management areas totaling over 300,000 acres, on which pheasant and quail live side by dde. Consequently a man who tries to keep his quail dog off pheasant ih Kansas would not only be missing a lot of good sport, but would have to avoid a large part of every piece of cover he hunted. "It's sll simply a matter of training," Jack Roche says. "I train my dogs on both pheasant and quail from the time they're pups." Details on how to do this are given in Jerome B. Robinson's article entitled "Will Pheasant Hunting Wreck A Quail Dog? No Wsy!" in the October issue of Sportt Afield. rtate around the turn of 4^1 century. "SaORiS AFIELD I One out of eveiy IS bcaaatd'l hunten in the United States! today iii bowhunter. I -SPORTS AFIELD 1 A pair of monk parakeets caafl produce 40 young a year. Theyfl adapt to a peat variety of cH-fl mates. Small wonder same I rials are alarmed at their spread throufch the Uaf^^H I States. -SPORTS AFIELD 3 An old weather proverb that when you see an unusual m number of crows flying in the 9 autumn, there will be a hard j| winter. -SPORTS AFIELD | #wr nmka$m Honey caramel. Pure Milk Chocolate. Big fresh Pecans. Everybody loves em. 15# - $1.25 - $2J0 - $3.75 - tfctO PMMUC? PflOFESiNMAl PRESCMPTNMtST PHONE 568-4131 Jj^JjMiwyPlilljjlULX ? ? H^l I ^r ?? / V J f / / if 1 I r^l ? i^ilffliilliil i HI >^v Jfi^Hnli 1 .-Jfe A llr/illlMf ? ?? I ? ? I r / * ? ? I ? f ?? ? ? 5B^.M A J 1 IS H fr, ? ^ A ?? I I Sim m Bm pESpRf; y stoCW j^^H^IKr r A- rurn. Non B Kill^.. n "** pf0ts A- . II Nov. 231 (?1 A.Ml f? IJ VERNON PARK MALL I KINSTON / FREE \ f CANDY! \ C \ FN TIE U I gj KIBS! J '^ravClirlstmas Starts Friday Vernon Jllili ftHOWPt ACT . ?? f IASTMN CAtOUHA II . V / Z2m V i K TOM J 7 2 A \ IM SALE MVS! \ 11FIIMT IWMMTI Vo4""/ mm mm g m< w ebnon Park mall^
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Nov. 22, 1973, edition 1
7
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