Today in Mississippi February 2015 Singing River

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Periodical postage (ISSN 1052 2433)

News for members of Singing River Electric Power Association

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Mitch Sisson plows effort into toy tractor repair

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Eat coastal with recipes from new Zonta Club cookbook

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Mississippi Outdoors: Embracing cycles of time


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How to Tell Time Like a Man

Today in Mississippi

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February 2015

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February 2015

It takes a special dedication to be an electric lineman hen the weather turns miserable as it does so often during a Mississippi winter, I find myself thinking of linemen. Their “office” is thousands of square miles of mostly rural landscape. On a sunny spring day, I envy their being outdoors all day. But not today; outside my window, it’s a gloomy and blustery mid-January day with a cold rain threatening. An electric power association is made up of far more than the wires and poles and substations you can see. It takes a small army of workers to keep your electric power on 24/7. You may not see them but rest assured, with literally tens of thousands of miles of power line winding through our service areas, our crews are out there every day working despite the frigid (or sweltering) weather conditions. Electric service is so dependable and affordable in this country that it’s easy to take it for granted. In some parts of the world, people have spotty electric service for only a few hours a day, if at all. We have highly trained and dedicated linemen to thank for the high quality of electric service we enjoy—in addition to the engineers, right-of-way workers, technicians and other employees who play vital roles as well. But for now I want to focus on linemen. Although National Lineman Appreciation Day is not until April 18, I think they deserve our gratitude every month, especially when severe weather makes their tough job so much tougher. The job of the linemen demands a certain getit-done attitude. They can’t wait until the sun comes out to start rebuilding lines after a tornado; they know recovery from any natural disaster can’t really begin until the power lines are rebuilt and electric service is restored. Electric power association linemen take a special pride in emergency power restoration work. They are playing a key role in helping storm vic-

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On the cover After Mitch Sisson, of Cumberland, fixed up a few toy tractors for family and friends, others began asking him to repair their childhood farm toys. Now, farm toy collectors from throughout the nation’s farm belt call on Sisson for tractor repair and modification services. Read about Sisson’s unusual hobby and the upcoming Starkville Farm Toy Show on pages 4-5.

tims, and if that doesn’t lead to job satisfaction, I don’t know what does. Storm work also fosters teamwork among electric power association linemen throughout the state (and the nation, for that matter). When an electric power association needs help to restore power, others lend crews to help. In time, this favor will be returned; electric power associations collectively serve about 85 percent of Mississippi’s landscape, so one or more is likely to suffer damage from every major storm My Opinion system that enters the Michael Callahan state. Executive Vice President/CEO Our linemen know EPAs of Mississippi not only how to build, repair and maintain power lines, but they know how to prevent accidents and save lives. When working around electricity, there’s no wiggle room for safety. Linemen have to learn and practice safety rules and regulations covering virtually every move they make while out on the lines—and driving to job sites. They look out for each other’s safety on the job, which bonds them in a way unique to linemen. Their top priority is returning home safely at the end of the day. Linemen’s responsibilities include the safety of members and the public too. Many of our linemen and safety coordinators visit schools to teach children the basic rules of electrical safety around power lines. Next time you pass a line crew working alongside the road, give ‘em a wave of thanks. And please slow down to help keep them safe. JOIN TODAY IN MISSISSIPPI

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Vol. 68 No. 2

EDITORIAL OFFICE & ADVERTISING 601-605-8600 Acceptance of advertising by Today in Mississippi does not imply endorsement of the advertised product or services by the publisher or Mississippi’s Electric Power Associations. Product satisfaction and delivery responsibility lie solely with the advertiser. • National advertising representative: National Country Market, 800-626-1181 Circulation of this issue: 433,358 Non-member subscription price: $9.50 per year

The Official Publication of the Electric Power Associations of Mississippi Today in Mississippi (ISSN 1052-2433) is published eleven times a year (Jan.Nov.) by Electric Power Associations of Mississippi, Inc., P.O. Box 3300, Ridgeland, MS 39158-3300, or 665 Highland Colony Parkway, Ridgeland, MS 39157. Phone 601-605-8600. Periodical postage paid at Ridgeland, MS, and additional office. The publisher (and/or its agent) reserves the right to refuse or edit all advertising. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Today, P.O. Box 3300, Ridgeland, MS 39158-3300

Visit us online at www.todayinmississippi.com

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Today in Mississippi

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Our Homeplace

You can almost smell the breads and cakes depicted in this mural painted on a storefront in downtown Greenville.

Mississippi is a state of great beauty, from the mighty Mississippi River to the Gulf Coast, to the Delta and all places in between. Magnolia trees in full bloom and mockingbirds singing are special things. Family farms, little towns, big cities and country homes are all a part of the state I love. They say “all roads lead home”; those are the roads I want to travel, home to my Mississippi. – Sybil Sykes Butler, Simpson County As I get older, I’m so grateful for the privilege of living in northeast Mississippi. Living in the country—with pine, cedar and oak trees shielding from the summer sun, storm rains and wind gusts—we feel separated from the hustle and bustle of busy lives on the go. Iced tea on the front porch with friends and family, lemon ice box pies from our own lemon trees and the wonderful scents of wisteria, magnolias and honeysuckle floating in the air. The doors and windows are open all spring and summer. No one will bother you, just the friendly neighbor bringing a basket of fresh, ripe tomatoes. You can’t beat living in Mississippi. – Iva Turner, Hamilton Marrying a Mississippian and visits to his hometown created a love for the place and the people here. A short time before I was widowed, we moved permanently here and made a new home. The people are caring and no one is a stranger longer than the time to say hello. They not only greet you but give you a hug and listen to what you have to share. The genuineness of their interest and caring is exhibited in their wanting to keep in touch through visits or calls, or bringing a dish of food when illness or death strikes your life. How grateful I am to be here, where I am loved and cared for, and where I can reciprocate the kindnesses shown me. Mississippi is the place I now call home. – Mary Faye Hammett, Olive Branch

What’s Mississippi to you? What do you treasure most about life in our state? Send your thoughts to Today in Mississippi, P.O. Box 3300, Ridgeland, MS 39158, or email them to news@epaofms.com. Please keep your comments brief. Submissions are subject to editing.

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Mitch Sisson plows effort into resurrecting

February 2015

For a Kosciusko collector’s John Deere tractor, Sisson replaced the rear wheels with a more realistic-looking set of rims and tires, adding spacers between them. He built the tank racks of brass tubing, the tanks of PVC water-line fittings and the straps of stainless steel zip ties. He’ll use heavy-gauge automotive electrical wire to make the chemical hoses.

By Debbie Stringer Mitch Sisson’s toy tractor repair work may not improve a farmer’s bottom line, but it can yield a bumper crop of nostalgia. Sisson repairs, customizes and refurbishes farm toys. Most that come into his workshop are 1/16-scale replicas of real tractors manufactured from the 1960s through the 1990s. “Most of what I do is taking a toy tractor and doing something to it to make it look more real,” said Sisson, a member of 4-County Electric Power Association. He has fixed toy tractors for customers throughout the nation’s farm belt—and in Canada. Sisson described them: “You’ve got people that just love tractors. Then you’ve got somebody who wants one just like their granddaddy bought brand new. Or you’ve got somebody who has the toy their brother had when he was a kid and wants it restored. And then you’ll have your buddy bet you can’t do it,” he said. “Sometimes they want [a tractor] restored to be just like the toy was when

“We show off by posting pictures of toys we’ve found or rebuilt on the Internet forum. We’re nerdy enough to think that’s cool.”

it was new. Sometimes they want it repaired, and then sometimes they’ll want it modified to resemble a model of a real tractor that never was produced in toy form.” The latter demands more creative solutions. Hunched over the work bench at his home in Webster County’s Cumberland community, Sisson fabricates

– Mitch Sisson

tiny versions of hitch assemblies, tank racks and other real-life components requested by customers. For example, he modified a toy John Deere 4020 by fashioning a hood-

Sisson built this tractor’s hitch assembly from brass tubing. Some of his customers want a quick-hitch added to their tractor to allow easy hookup to their hitch-mounted toy implements.

A Jackson collector’s Case tractor came to Sisson with a broken front axle and axle assembly. Sisson was able to buy a replacement axle from another tractor builder in Wisconsin, but often he has to fabricate parts himself.

mounted propane fuel tank from a PVC water-line cap. “Now you have a 4020 LP. The toy companies never made one of these,” he said. Sisson’s interest in toy tractors started around 1995. “I stumbled across a parts catalog for toy tractors and I thought, that is the coolest thing I’ve seen,” he said. “Not long after that, we found some toys that me and my brother had played with when we were kids. I had the idea that I would order the parts I needed and rebuild those little toys, and give them to him for Christmas. And I did.” Sisson had no idea people collected toy tractors until he attended a gathering of avid collectors at a home in Satartia. “I was the only one in the room that had ever rebuilt a toy tractor or worked on one, so everybody wanted my phone number,” Sisson said. Some of the the collectors had attended the large farm toy shows common in midwestern states, and they wanted to stage a show in Mississippi. So was planted the seed for the annual Starkville Farm Toy Show, which Sisson has helped organize since it began in


February 2015

2001. Set for Feb. 27-28 at the Mississippi Horse Park, the event brings together enthusiasts to buy, sell and swap toy tractors and other farm and logging toys. It’s not unusual for neighbors to bump into each other at the show and discover they share a passion for farm toys. “One guy who helps with the show told me, ‘We’re coming out of the closet!’” Sisson said. Most newcomers to the show are surprised at what they see. “They never knew anybody collected these, and they never dreamed anyone could repair one or build one,” he said. Sisson values the friendships he has made at shows and through online forums devoted to farm toys. Discussing repair solutions with others facing the same challenges can save countless hours of trial and error. “We show off by posting pictures of toys we’ve found or rebuilt on the Internet forum. We’re nerdy enough to think that’s cool,” Sisson said. “He impresses me with what he can do. It’s just amazing,” said Christy Sis-

Maggie, 11, one of the Sissons’ two daughters, seems to share her dad’s interest in farm toys. Sisson holds the 1940s tin truck he repaired and repainted. Possibly manufactured by Wyandotte, the truck was a childhood toy of his wife’s uncle.

son, his wife and an eighth-grade English teacher at East Webster High School. Although he has become well known

in farm toy circles for the quality of his work, Sisson still considers it strictly a hobby; by day he’s a CAD technician for a civil engineering firm. But at night, after his family is tucked in bed, he mounts the stairs leading to the workshop above his garage. There he will toil until midnight on any one of several tractors awaiting repairs or modifications. His work bench holds a mini cut-off saw, an electric rotary tool, metal files, a sander and a mini torch for soldering brass. The toughest jobs usually involve creating a realistic part, such as a working three-point hitch assembly or a fourlegged roll bar, using brass tubing. For the roll bar, Sisson discovered that filling the square tubing with sand prevented distortion while bending the piece into shape. Toy tractors needing a cosmetic makeover get the full treatment. Sisson sandblasts rust away before filling damaged areas with putty or epoxy glue. Sometimes he uses steel pins to reinforce the lengthwise join in a two-piece diecast tractor body.

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“I try to build this stuff to where it will hold up,” he said. Next he applies a coat of primer and two topcoats of paint. Sanding ensures a smooth finish. The finishing touch: new decals, including one from imaginary tractor dealer “Sisson Equipment, Cumberland, Miss.” This time of year, Sisson works every night to finish toys promised for delivery to customers at the Starkville show. After the show, he will take a few months off from tractor repair work before returning to his shop in the fall. “I love it,” Sisson said. “It’s fun. I used to enjoy sitting in a deer stand or driving tractors. I still like driving tractors, but I think I get just as much enjoyment out of this.” Mitch Sisson can be reached by email at ihm1566@yahoo.com. Sisson recommends PirateFarmToys.proboards.com, Facebook.com/PirateFarmToys and ToyTractorTimes.com for more information on all aspects of farm toys. For details on the 14th Annual Starkville Farm Toy Show, see Mississippi Events on page 14.

“I try to build this stuff to where it will hold up.” From fall through later winter, Sisson works most every night in his workshop. He bought the red truck, parked on top of the storage cabinet, to supply a new grill for the refurbished version pictured above.


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February 2015

Sunsets a bright spot in winter

A Delta sunset in February proves wrong all of us who ever thought there is no color in the Delta in winter. The days grow noticeably longer this month as the sun climbs higher in the winter sky. Photo: Walt Grayson

ebruary is one of my the airport, the sun sets directly behind favorite months. It has the city in mid-November, as it inches been since talking to a southward each day. friend of mine years and By Dec. 21 (or 22, depending on years ago about the short which day the solstice comes, the later days of winter. date in years closest to Leap Year), it sets Even though they start getting longer as far south as it is going, well to the after the winter solstice in December, south of town, before starting its return they are still short. He agreed, and trip northward again. And by the time it remarked that usually it takes until has crept back behind the city once about February before you start noticing more, spring is close at hand. the longer afternoons. And since then I Of course, you could know all this by have patiently waited for every February the calendar. But it gives you something to get here. And when it does, I find I’m to watch for while driving. no longer driving home after work in the By like token, I have noticed on the dark. day of the summer solstice that the sun A lot can be said, howevsets on a direct line down er, for the short days of the middle of the street winter, especially in the catwhere we live. egory of Mississippi sunsets Winter solstice? It sets and sunrises. For instance, if across the street in my you want to see a Gulf neighbor’s backyard someCoast sunset over the water, where. I haven’t picked out it has to be in winter. I any landmarks for that day don’t know the exact date as of yet. but on toward spring and All of those upper chanMississippi all of summer and into the nels on cable and satellite Seen fall, the sun sets farther TV pour out shows all the by Walt Grayson north over land. I assume time about how Stonehenge sunrises are similar. You’d was just a giant calendar have to check with someone who is an where the sun shown through a certain earlier riser than I am for that, though. arch and illuminated a certain stone on Here in mid-state, I use the Jackson Mid Summer’s Day, or something like skyline as a makeshift Stonehenge in late that. Seems to me you could have made fall and mid-winter. As you are driving something that would have worked just toward Jackson on Lakeland drive east of as well with river rocks in a sand pile and

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saved a lot of hauling of 20-ton boulders. But then again, if they did something simple like that, what would they show on those upper TV channels? Well, besides UFOs, ghosts, Big Foot and the pyramids? When I was growing up in the Delta, occasionally the thought would come to mind that this had to be the drabbest place on the planet in the winter, especially on cold, cloudy, foggy days. Nothing but gray sky, brown trees and black dirt. Then the clouds would part a little and the sun would set. And all of a sudden all of creation would prove me

wrong. Because into this drab world would shift into reds and golds and oranges and a deep blue sky. So now in winter when it’s dark and cloudy, I watch for the sunset, or February. Each holds some promise of some color and more light. (Sunrises may do the same. I’ll have to ask someone who would know, sometime.) Walt Grayson is the host of “Mississippi Roads” on Mississippi Public Broadcasting television, and the author of two “Looking Around Mississippi” books and “Oh! That Reminds Me: More Mississippi Homegrown Stories.” Contact Grayson at walt@waltgrayson.com.


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Is there a line we cross to reach old age? ruising my brain for an idea is an adventure for me. As I prepared to write this column, that’s what I described myself doing. I called Mr. Roy on the cell phone. He is good at giving me ideas. My healthy man was walking in the woods and always carrying that little device, because I insist. After all, he could fall, get attacked by a bear and all sorts of things that at his age—our age—help might be essential. “Hey, it’s me,” I said. “What is one thing that all people have in common?” I like to write about commonalities since I try to zero in on topics that my readers are interested in reading. “How about aging? Dayton Whites sent a poignant email yesterday dealing with that topic. Don’t plagiarize, of course,” he laughed. Grin ‘n’ That was an Bare It insult! I’ve by Kay Grafe never copied anyone’s writings except a quote and I’ve always given the author due credit. Dayton’s email stated, “Today is the oldest you have ever been, and the youngest that you will ever be. Enjoy it!” Mr. Roy did have an inspired sugges-

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tion. And that topic is easy, since I’m experiencing a tad of the aging process. Everybody will go through that journey if they live long enough. We also age at different rates. My only husband and I continued this conversation on the way to church the next day. He said, “I never thought I’d have a twinge of aches when I got out of a car.” I giggled, “How about getting out of bed in the mornings? And where did that saying, ‘Old age is not for sissies,’ originate?” He came to the conclusion it was Mark Twain, but when we returned from church he Googled the quotation. It appears it came from the actress Betty Davis. How many remember her?

To be honest I have resisted the thought of “old age.” But recently with one thing after another happening to me, the thought keeps popping up. I’m blessed that I haven’t had catastrophic ailments (however, a fall off my desk came close), but Mr. Roy and I have had very uncomfortable body distress lately. I always assumed other people, not us, had aches and pains. Anyway, as vain as I’ve always been and Mr. Roy says that I still am, there is irrefutable evidence that I have crossed the line into older age. It’s hard to even write it. Most of our friends are right along with me, though some are in denial. I own up to it when my parts are hurting.

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Next ‘Picture This’: Pet Portraits You know how beautiful and sweet your pet looks. Now you can show everyone else. Pet Portraits is the theme of our next “Picture This” reader photo feature. Selected photos will appear in the April issue of Today in Mississippi. Submissions must be postmarked or emailed by March 16. Prints and digital photos are accepted. Mail prints or a photo CD to Picture This, Today in Mississippi, P.O. Box 3300, Ridgeland, MS 39158-3300. Attach digital submissions to an email addressed to news@epaofms.com. Please include the pet’s name and the photographer’s name, phone number, mailing address and, if applicable, the electric power association providing service to that address. For more information, go to www.todayinmississippi.com and click on “Picture This Guidelines.” Or call 601-605-8600.

Or I look in the mirror. And this brings me to the point of today’s discussion, which is dedicated to my friends and loyal readers of “Grin.” When Roy and I were young married kids with kids of our own, we dreamed of traveling and doing exciting things. We later dreamed that when our kids were out of college and the mortgage was paid off, we would have plenty of money; life would be great. We didn’t realize that our life’s journey was an amazing part of our lives. We had fun, but did we truly enjoy every moment and day as fully as we should have? Roy and I often tell our children: Enjoy each day and stop to smell the roses. They look at us and say, “Oh, we do.” I now realize we made the same remark years ago when our parents and grandparents gave us that advice. They were wise. After all, they had already crossed the line into old age. We are now wise. Therefore, let us keep an awesome attitude for adventure across that line; we will then look forward to an even older age. Kay Grafe is the author of “Oh My Gosh, Virginia.” To order, send name, address, phone number and $16.95, plus $3.50 S&H to Kay Grafe, 2142 Fig Farm Road, Lucedale, MS 39452.


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Mike Smith, General Manager & CEO Lorri Freeman, Manager of Public Relations Amanda Parker, Public Relations Specialist For more information, call 601-947-4211/228-497-1313 x 2251 or visit our website at www.singingriver.com

CEO’s message

Planning for future growth and reliable service Mike Smith, General Manager and CEO

Planning for improvements and additions to Singing River Electric’s distribution system is essential for maintaining reliable electric service to our members. Singing River Electric engineers are finalizing the 2015-2018 Construction Work Plan, an essential tool in the planning process. This work plan will include upgrades to existing power lines and improvements to current substations, as well as the construction of new substa-

tions and power lines to accommodate future growth. Computerized engineering models of Singing River Electric’s system are used to determine where improvements are needed based on anticipated load growth, and the models along with data from the Outage Management System assist in evaluating other system upgrades to improve reliability. The four-year construction work plan is part of a 10-year, long-range planning document. It is necessary to develop not only short-term but also long-term planning documents due to the time it takes to accomplish the work; a new substation can take a minimum of three years to acquire environmental clearances, neces-

sary permitting and equipment for new construction. Both plans are coordinated with South Mississippi Electric, Singing River Electric’s generation and transmission cooperative. Since Singing River Electric is a Rural Utilities Service (RUS) borrower, the construction work plan must also be reviewed and approved by RUS. Singing River Electric’s skilled employees plan and construct all substations and power lines, as well as monitor and address

reliability issues when they occur. Singing River Electric is committed to providing our members the most reliable electric service at the most economical cost.

Statement of Nondiscrimination: Singing River Electric Power Association is an equal opportunity provider and employer. If you wish to file a Civil Rights program complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, found online at http://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html, or at any USDA office, or call (866) 632-9992 to request the form. You may also write a letter containing all of the information requested in the form. Send your completed complaint form or letter to us by mail at U.S. Department of Agriculture, Director, Office of Adjudication, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, by fax (202) 690-7442 or email at program.intake@usda.gov.


Winter care for well pumps www.siningriver.com

Natural Gas and Coal Prices:

February 2015 I Today in Mississippi I 9

What do they mean for electricity? Members often ask, “Where does my power come from?” There are two answers to this question. The simple answer is South Mississippi Electric Power Association (SME), which is a member-owned electric cooperative headquartered in Hattiesburg. SME is owned by 11 electric cooperatives in the state and is responsible for generating or purchasing electric energy and transmitting it to Singing River Electric’s substations. The second and much more complicated answer is explaining the process of generating and transmitting electric energy. There is a lot of infrastructure and people behind the light switches in your home. Electric energy begins when a fuel source, like coal or natural gas, is burned to boil water and create highpressured steam. This steam spins a turbine and rotates magnets, creating electric energy. This electricity is pushed over high voltage transmission power lines to Singing River Electric substations. A second question members ask is,

“What makes the cost of electricity go up?” The cost of wholesale power makes up 75 percent of Singing River Electric’s total budget. The main contributors to this cost are fuel sources (coal, natural gas, nuclear, etc.), which is why utilities across the nation have been so concerned about the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) efforts to remove coal. Natural gas prices are low at the moment, but with coal plants being closed across the nation and the rising demand of natural gas as a fuel source, it is unrealistic to expect natural gas prices to remain low. Other fuel sources can produce electricity, but they are not clear winners for Mississippi. For example, nuclear power is low cost and quite dependable, but only a few nuclear plants have been constructed in the U.S. in the past 30 years. SME does have part ownership in Grand Gulf in Port Gibson, Miss., but it is for a finite 10 percent. Nuclear cannot replace coal. Solar power is an option, and SME is planning to offer solar to Singing

River Electric members in the near future. However, there are two main issues with solar. The first is that it runs on sunshine, and southeast Mississippi has more cloudy days than you would think. The second issue is that it takes very large amounts of land acreage to get significant production from solar. To replace all of the generation from coal plants located in the state, it would take more than 21,000 acres of land. Though an important resource and one to be offered soon, solar cannot replace coal. Wind power requires 25-30 mile per hour sustained winds to operate and is not practical in Mississippi. Understanding where your power comes from is important to help understand what drives costs. SME has always worked to keep a mix of generation fuel sources to not be susceptible to one fuel source’s rising prices and keep costs low. New EPA regulations are eliminating fuel sources from the mix and that will lead to higher electric bills for south Mississippi in the near future.

Jeff Gray Member Services Representative gray@singingriver.com

If you have a well pump that is not used on a daily basis, it is recommended to shut it off and drain it during the winter to avoid damage in freezing temperatures. If it must stay charged during

freezing temperatures, it is recommended to place a 100-watt light bulb close to the pump. The heat generated from the light bulb should be enough to keep the pump from freezing. It is not recommended to place a small space heater next to the pump due to the cost of operation of the heater and the fire hazard. These small heaters range from 600 to 1500 watts. Some small heaters have thermostats, but they usually do not shut off due to the cold temperatures outside. The result is more energy used and added costs to power bills.

Notice of Singing River Electric Director Qualification Period Candidates seeking election to the board of directors for Singing River Electric Power Association must visit Singing River Electric’s Lucedale office (11187 Old 63 South) and obtain a Director Candidate Packet. The forms and petitions in the packet must be completed and returned by close of business on the last day of March (Tuesday, March 31, 2015).


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Fruit Salad With Honey Orange Dressing 1⁄3 cup fresh orange juice 2 Tbsp. honey ¼ tsp. cinnamon

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Since 1977, members of the Zonta Club of Pascagoula have devoted immeasurable time and effort on community service projects that benefit a wide range of local residents. The club’s primary fundraising event, the Zonta Arts & Crafts Festival, held annually in October, generates funds to help support Home of Grace for Women and Children, the Contingency Fund for the Deaf, Gulf Coast Children’s Home for Young Ladies, literacy efforts and several scholarships, and many other prominent non-profit organizations. Sales of Zonta’s new cookbook, “Zonta Cookz,” will supplement the organization’s ability to fund good works. Recipes include seafood dishes from home cooks and local restaurants, family heirloom recipes, holiday ideas and desserts from kipfels to Key lime pie. To order the cookbook, send request (with phone number) to Zonta Club of Pascagoula, P.O. Box 1842, Pascagoula, MS 39558-1842. Price is $15 plus $5 S&H per book. For more information, call 228-497-9533 or visit the club online at www.zontapascagoula.info. Zonta International was established in 1919 in Buffalo, N.Y., by some of the nation’s first generation of college-educated women. Its world-wide membership comprises business and professional women working together to advance the status of women. More than 31,000 members in 66 countries participate in a local Zonta Club. Learn more at www.Zonta.org.

Orange Tiramisu 1 sugar-free angel food cake 1 cup orange juice 1 (1-oz.) box sugar-free vanilla instant pudding mix 1 cup milk

1 cup sugar-free whipped topping 2 tsp. grated orange zest 1 tsp. orange extract Mandarin orange slices, optional

Slice angel food cake crosswise into 1/2-inch slices. Brush both cut sides with orange juice. Combine pudding mix and milk in a bowl, and whisk for 1 minute or until thick. Fold in whipped topping, orange zest and extract. Spread a thin layer of pudding mixture in a shallow 2-quart serving dish. Layer the cake slices and the remaining pudding, half at a time. Chill for 3 hours. Garnish with mandarin orange slices, if desired.

4 kiwis, peeled and cut into pieces 2 cups fresh strawberries or raspberries 2 small bananas, sliced

In a medium bowl, whisk together juice, honey and cinnamon. Add fruit and toss gently.

Best Mexican Beef Casserole Ever 1 lb. extra-lean ground beef 1 medium onion, chopped 1 can whole kernel corn, drained 1 can black beans, rinsed and drained 1 pkg. taco seasoning mix 8 to 12 corn tortillas

¾ cup fat-free sour cream 2 cans Rotel tomatoes with green chilies, drained 1⁄3 cup shredded Mexican blend or taco cheese Sliced jalapeño peppers

Preheat oven to 350 F. Brown ground beef and onions in a skillet for about 10 to 12 minutes; drain. Stir in corn, beans, tomatoes and taco seasoning. Mix well and simmer for 5 minutes. Coat a 2-quart oblong baking dish with cooking spray. Place half of the tortillas in the bottom. Spoon half of the beef mixture on top. Spread sour cream over beef. Repeat tortilla and beef layers. Bake for 25 minutes. Remove from oven, sprinkle with cheese and add sliced jalapeños on top. Bake for 5 minutes or until cheese is melted. Let stand 5 minutes before serving.

LaFont Inn Seafood Casserole 1 lb. crabmeat 1 lb. shrimp, cooked, shelled and deveined 1 cup sour cream ¼ cup finely chopped onion 1 cup finely chopped celery

½ cup finely chopped bell pepper ½ tsp. salt 1 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce 2 cups bread crumbs ½ cup melted butter Paprika

Combine crabmeat, shrimp, sour cream, onion, celery, bell pepper, salt and Worcestershire sauce. Pour into buttered 2 ½-quart casserole dish. Top with bread crumbs and melted butter. Sprinkle with paprika. Bake at 400 F for 25 minutes or until thoroughly heated. Yield: 6 servings

Vrazel’s Crabmeat Au Gratin 1 ½ cups medium diced onions 1 ½ cups butter, divided ¾ cup flour 1 qt. half-and-half

1 egg yolk Salt and pepper to taste 1 lb. crabmeat ¾ cup (6 oz.) Parmesan cheese

Sauté onions until clear in 3/4 cup of the butter. Melt remaining 3/4 cup of butter over medium heat. Add flour and stir for 5 minutes, but do not brown. Add halfand-half and bring to just a simmer. Turn off heat. Place egg yolk into a bowl and add 3 to 4 ounces of hot cream sauce; mix well. Repeat with 3 to 4 more ounces of cream sauce. Add remaining sauce and blend well. Adjust seasoning to taste with salt and pepper. Stir in sautéed onions and crabmeat. Pour into a casserole dish and top with cheese. Bake at 375 F until lightly browned and bubbly. Serves 4.

Oysters Bienville 1 stick butter, melted ½ cup Worcestershire sauce Few drops liquid smoke and⁄or hot sauce 1 pint oysters

Shredded cheese Several slices raw bacon, cut into small pieces Prepared oyster shells or oven-proof dish

Mix melted butter, Worcestershire sauce and liquid smoke and/or hot sauce. Place each oyster into a shell or an oven-proof dish, and sprinkle with shredded cheese. Top with bacon pieces. Spoon butter mixture over each oyster. Bake at 400 F for 15 to 20 minutes or until bacon is done. Watch carefully.


February 2015

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Today in Mississippi

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Embracing the cycles of time or the most part, fall/win- visit their foreign and unfamiliar enviter hunting seasons are rons, and how it would be to roast goat over. Yes, there are excep- ribs over an open fire, the Northern tions. A few days of deer Lights dancing and painting the sky an hunting in portions of the eerie and picturesque shade of phantomstate, some small game opportunities like colors. I determined to do that. until the end of the month. And there is But I never did, and now it is no turkey season coming up in March. But longer feasible. Cycles of time have seen basically those anticipated seasons that to that. Back ailments and shoulder disgot underway in September are now a orders and a host of other unpleasant part of days gone by, sucmatters associated with age cumbing to the cycles of will not allow the climb, a time. portable camp on a pack It is at this point each frame the required burden year that I find myself in for such endeavors. I simply deep reflection. That refleccould not manage it. tion, while encompassing What, then, of my the past hunting seasons, dream? I could mourn the doesn’t end there. Season fact that time has caught up closures simply send up with me where mountain another signal of passing goats are concerned, or I Mississippi time that spurs my mind to could smile in grateful recall Outdoors consider more important of those grand times I sat by Tony Kinton matters that time has behind a spotting scope and impacted and will continue watched awestruck as those to impact. The overriding element in it glorious white bundles of wildness all is the aging process and inevitable teetered about the cliffs above. I choose changes it brings. the latter. Allowing this line of thought to There was also the desire to make a develop yet possess a hunting focus, I true wilderness elk hunt, the kind that consider mountain goats. I saw them in demands a 20-mile horseback ride into Alaska and British Columbia years ago the high country and 10 nights in wall while hunting moose. The goats were tents suspended from aspen frameworks. magnificent, suspended it seemed atop It would be a breathtaking experience. cathedral peaks and practically dangling But 20 miles on horseback flies in the with remarkable agility from shale slides. face of a hip disorder that plagues with I wondered then how it would be to monotonous regularity. I could grieve hunt these commanding creatures and the fact that time has had its often sinister way with me and prohibits my participation in such a journey. Or, I could revisit that one time I did take an elk. It was, however, not one of those true wilderness outings I had read about. Alone and on foot from camp Final Expense Burial two miles down the mountain, I Insurance Policies encountered the bull high up near FOR ONLY PENNIES A DAY Sleepy Cat at midday. It took the Guaranteed Issue remainder of that day and from daylight

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until dark the following to retrieve the meat and antlers. I was up to the task at hand back then. I now prefer to sit and look at that shoulder mount with fond memory rather than lament some uncertain possibility and missed opportunity. I can’t, even now, help but entertain a hunt for red stag in New Zealand. But again that matter of mountains and notoriously rugged terrain enters the equation. Oh, it is possible there to hire a helicopter to take one such as I to the top so the hunt can be made downward. I am somewhat at ease with that if there are no options, but I would be far more in tune with making the climb and doing

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this thing as it should be done. If I can’t, perhaps I would be more at peace omitting such an attempt completely. Will I try it? Perhaps. As is often said: Time will tell. And one more trip to Africa! That is another matter for consideration, for 20 hours on an airplane exacted a severe toll on my body during the last two trips. A fourth and final excursion may best be set aside, but I shall consider it during 2015 for 2016. Does all this talk or resignation mean that dreams have vanished? Not at all. Many remain. Some may be realized; some may never become reality. But in the greater scheme of things, it is more healthful to remember the good of the past and celebrate that rather than to collect disdain for years gone and their mysterious workings. We are made better when we, with grace and gratitude, embrace the cycles of time. Tony Kinton has been an active outdoors writer for 30 years. His newest book, “Rambling Through Pleasant Memories,” is now available. Order from Amazon.com or Kinton’s website: www.tonykinton.com.


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February 2015

Marketplace

Mobile Home Owners: ROOF KING

Mississippi

Type or print your ad clearly. Be sure to include your telephone number. Deadline is the 10th of each month for the next month’s issue. Rate is $2.50 per word, 10-word minimum. Mail payment with your ad to Today in Mississippi, P.O. Box 3300, Ridgeland, MS 39158-3300. Have any questions? Phone 601-605-8600 or email advertising@epaofms.com.

FOR SALE SAWMILL EXCHANGE: North America’s largest source of used portable sawmills and commercial sawmill equipment for woodlot and sawmill operations. Over 800 listings. Call for a free list or to sell your equipment, 800-459-2148. www.sawmillexchange.com. Popular Honeys, Sorghum, Jams...locally made! Many other popular Smokies items! Shop 24/7 for All Your Smokies Goodies! Immediate shipment of your orders! www.smokymountainsuperstore.com. The Children Garden Consignment Shop Now Open - For Children and Women. 5174 Main Street, Lucedale. 601-990-9254.

VACATION RENTALS www.hideawayprop@hotmail.com. Cabins Pigeon Forge, TN, peaceful, convenient location, owner rates, 251-649-3344, 251-649-4049. SMOKIES. TOWNSEND, TN. 2 BR, 2 BATH Log Home, Jacuzzi, Fireplace, wrap-around porch, charcoal grill. 865-320-4216. For rental details and pictures E-mail: tncabin.lonnie@yahoo.com. APPALACHIAN TRAIL Cabins by trail in Georgia mountains. 3000’ above sea level. Snowy winters, cool summers, inexpensive rates. 800-284-6866. www.bloodmountain.com.

MISCELLANEOUS PLAY GOSPEL SONGS by Ear! $12.95. “Learn Gospel Music” - chording, runs, fills - $12.95. Both $24. Davidsons, 6727MS Metcalf, Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66204. 913-262-4982. BECOME AN ORDAINED MINISTER, by Correspondence study. The harvest truly is great, the laborours are few. Luke 10:2. Free info. Ministers for Christ Assembly of Churches, 7558 West Thunderbird Rd., Ste 1-114, Peoria, AZ 85381. http://www.ordination.org. FREE BOOKS/DVDS, Soon the “Mark of the Beast” will be enforced as Church and State unite! Let the Bible reveal. The Bible Says, P.O. Box 99, Lenoir City, TN 37771. 888-211-1715. thebiblesaystruth@yahoo.com.

LAND FOR SALE 47 ACRES • HINDS COUNTY 4 miles south of Bolton, MS. On Houston Road off RaymondBolton Road. Two small ponds, timber and open with pines planted 2010 spring. Good deer hunting near Jackson, Clinton and Vicksburg area. Two miles from Central Hinds Academy, 4 miles from Hinds Community College, Raymond campus. Several home sites with rolling hills. $ 129,250 FIRM • Call 601-941-3726 or email bridges@epaofms.com for other info.

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February 2015

MISSISSIPPI

Events

Want more than 400,000 readers to know about your special event? Submit it at least two months prior to the event date. Submissions must include a phone number with area code for publication. Mail to Mississippi Events, Today in Mississippi, P.O. Box 3300, Ridgeland, MS 39158-3300; fax to 601-605-8601; or email to news@epaofms.com. Events open to the public will be published free of charge as space allows. Please note that events are subject to change; we recommend calling to confirm details before traveling.

Welcome Center Celebrates Black History Month, Feb. 10, Hernando. Food, entertainment, African-American arts and crafts; 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. DeSoto County Welcome Center. Details: 662-429-9969. Dixie National Livestock Show and Rodeo, Feb. 12-18, Jackson. Gold buckle champion cowboys to compete; special entertainers daily. Admission. Mississippi Coliseum. Details: 601961-4000; dixienational.org. The McKameys in Concert, Feb. 13, Runnelstown. Love offering; 7 p.m. First Baptist Church of Runnelstown. Details: 601-583-3733. 48th Annual Mid-South Civil War and Antique Military Show, Feb. 14-15, Southaven. Collectibles, memorabilia, weapons, educational speakers, exhibits, living history, more. Admission. The Arena. Details: 901-388-2346; sam@skefos.com. JAMfest Lite Series Cheer and Dance Competition, Feb. 21, Southaven. Free admission; 8 a.m. Landers Center. Details: jamfest.com. Brandon Opry, Feb. 21, Brandon. Entertainers: Country Jack Harper, Casey McAlpin, the Brandon Opry; doors open 5:30 p.m. Admission. Brandon City Hall. Details: 601-825-5021. Music Festival, Feb. 26-28, Morton. Bluegrass, gospel, country music from six performing groups. Camping. Livingston Performing Arts Center. Roosevelt State Park. Details: 601-537-3641. 14th Annual Starkville Farm Toy Show, Feb. 27-28, Starkville. Buy/sell/trade or talk farm and logging toys, restorations, repair info, custom pieces. Free admission. Opens 5 p.m. Friday. Mississippi Horse Park. Details: 662418-9101, 662-769-3107. 27th Annual Arbor Day Run, Walk & Roll, Feb. 28, Biloxi. Five K, 1-mile and 1/4-mile run/walk/roll for disability awareness; 8 a.m. noon. Music, food, wheelchair basketball to follow. Biloxi Towne Green. Details: 228-6044020. Sustainable Home Gardening, Feb. 28, Picayune. Discussion to include wise water use,

plant selection, composting and wildlife. Admission; 10-11 a.m. The Crosby Arboretum. Details: 601-799-2311; crosbyarboretum.msstate.edu. Glow Run 5K and Kids Fun Run, Feb. 28, Southaven. Benefits Healing Hearts Child Advocacy Center. Entry fee; 7 p.m. Snowden Grove Park. Details: communitybank.net/glow5k. 56th Annual Mississippi Gem, Mineral, Fossil and Jewelry Show, Feb. 28 - March 1, Jackson. Dealers, lapidary arts demos, children’s activities, more. Admission. Mississippi Trade Mart, fairgrounds. Details: missgems.org. Greenhouse Tomato Short Course, March 34, Raymond. Seminars on production of green-

house tomatoes; exhibitors. Registration fee. Eagle Ridge Conference Center. Details: 601892-3731; greenhousetomatosc.com. Carl Touchstone Mississippi 50 Trail Run, March 7, Laurel. Fifty-mile, 50K and 20K endurance runs. Longleaf Horse Trail, DeSoto National Forest. Details: ms50.com. Lamar County Bluegrass Festival, March 12-14, Purvis. Lamar County Community Shelter. Details: 601-436-1170, 601-596-6496. Hibernia Marching Society St. Patrick’s Day Parade and Races, March 14, Biloxi. One-mile run at 9 a.m., 5K at 9:30 a.m., parade at 2 p.m. Details: (parade) 228-265-3416; (races) 228-235-3280, gulfcoastrunningclub.org.

Tickets available through

Dixie National Mobile App Download Free from the Apple or Android Store.


I

February 2015

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5

WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF WELDING WIRE

calling rFreight.com or by at our stores, Harbo n or prior LIMIT 3 - Good t be used with other discount or coupo l receipt. 800-423-2567. Cannodays from original purchase with origina must be able. Original coupon per day. purchases after 30 ansfer Non-tr last. es Offer good while supplih 6/5/15. Limit one coupon per customer presented. Valid throug

R ! PE ON SU UP CO

6

Item 42292 shown

SAVE $

Item 68498 shown

SAVE 70% $ 99

LOT NO. 68887/61849

15

RAPID PUMP® 4 TON HEAVY DUTY STEEL FLOOR JACK

$ 99

LOT NO. 42292 69594/69955

• No Gas Require

$9999

129

calling rFreight.com or by at our stores, Harbo n or prior LIMIT 4 - Good t be used with other discount or coupo l receipt. 800-423-2567. Cannodays from original purchase with origina n must be coupo al Origin able. purchases after 30 per day. es last. Non-transfer Offer good while supplih 6/5/15. Limit one coupon per customer presented. Valid throug

R ! PE ON SU UP CO

R ! PE ON SU UP CO

R ! PE ON SU UP CO

REG. PRICE $299.99

LIMIT 5 - Good at our stores, HarborFreight.com or by calling 800-423-2567. Cannot be used with other discount or coupon or prior purchases after 30 days from original purchase with original receipt. Offer good while supplies last. Non-transferable. Original coupon must be presented. Valid through 6/5/15. Limit one coupon per customer per day.

1999

I

LIMIT 3 - Good at our stores, HarborFreight.com or by calling 800-423-2567. Cannot be used with other discount or coupon or prior purchases after 30 days from original purchase with original receipt. Offer good while supplies last. Non-transferable. Original coupon must be presented. Valid through 6/5/15. Limit one coupon per customer per day.

$ 99

LOT NO. 94141 69874 Item 61320 94141 shown 61913 61914

1" x 25 FT. TAPE MEASURE

ANY SINGLE ITEM

LIMIT 1 - Save 20% on any one item purchased at our stores or HarborFreight.com or by calling 800-423-2567. *Cannot be used with other discount, coupon, gift cards, Inside Track Club membership, extended service plans or on any of the following: compressors, generators, tool storage or carts, welders, floor jacks, Towable Ride-On Trencher, Saw Mill (Item 61712/62366/67138), Predator Gas Power Items, open box items, in-store event or parking lot sale items. Not valid on prior purchases after 30 days from original purchase date with original receipt. Non-transferable. Original coupon must be presented. Valid through 6/5/15. Limit one coupon per customer per day.

SAVE $120

R ! PE ON SU UP CO

Item 69080 shown

OFF

SAVE 60%

TRIPLE BALL TRAILER HITCH

SAVE 66%

WITH ANY PURCHASE

ITEM 69080 69030/69031

Item 47902 shown

LIMIT 9 - Good at our stores, HarborFreight.com or by calling 800-423-2567. Cannot be used with other discount or coupon or prior purchases after 30 days from original purchase with original receipt. Offer good while supplies last. Non-transferable. Original coupon must be presented. Valid through 6/5/15. Limit one coupon per customer per day.

SUPER COUPON

FREE 20%

R ! PE ON SU UP CO

3

R ! PE ON SU UP CO

SUPER COUPON

Today in Mississippi

$

1999

REG. PRICE $39.99

LIMIT 6 - Good at our stores, HarborFreight.com or by calling 800-423-2567. Cannot be used with other discount or coupon or prior purchases after 30 days from original purchase with original receipt. Offer good while supplies last. Non-transferable. Original coupon must be presented. Valid through 6/5/15. Limit one coupon per customer per day.

• 550 Stores Nationwide • HarborFreight.com 800-423-2567


TV Service SAVE A DISH + Internet BUNDLE High-Speed For One Low Price Ask for details

DISH TV Service promotional prices start at

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for 12 mo.

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All calls with InfinityDISH are monitored and recorded for quality assurance and training purposes. Important Terms and Conditions: Promotional Offers: Require activation of new qualifying DISH service. All prices, fees, charges, packages, programming, features, functionality and offers subject to change without notice. After 12-month promotional period, then-current monthly price applies and is subject to change. ETF: If you cancel service during first 24 months, early termination fee of $20 for each month remaining applies. Additional Requirements: Hopper: Monthly fees: Hopper, $12; Joey, $7; Super Joey, $10. Recording hours vary; 2000 hours based on SD programming. HD Free for Life: Additional $10/mo HD fee waived for life of current account; requires continuous enrollment in AutoPay with Paperless Billing. Premium Channels: Premium offer value is up to $102; after 3 months then-current monthly prices apply and are subject to change. Installation/Equipment Requirements: Free Standard Professional Installation only. Leased equipment must be returned to DISH upon cancellation or unreturned equipment fees apply. Upfront and additional monthly fees may apply. Miscellaneous: Offers available for new and qualified former customers, and subject to terms of applicable Promotional and Residential Customer agreements. State reimbursement charges may apply. Additional restrictions and taxes may apply. Offers end 6/10/15. © 2015 DISH Network L.L.C. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. STARZ and related channels and service marks are property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. ENCORE and related channels and service marks are the property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. Visit encoretv.com for air dates/times. Visa® gift card must be requested through your DISH Representative at time of purchase. $25 Visa® gift card requires activation and $2.95 shipping and handling fee. You will receive a claim voucher within 3-4 weeks and the voucher must be returned within 30 days. Your Visa® gift card will arrive in approximately 6-8 weeks. InfinityDISH charges a one-time $49.99 non-refundable processing fee which is subject to change at any time without notice. Indiana C.P.D. Reg. No. T.S. R1903. *Certain restrictions apply. Based on the availability in your area.


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