T * mrßda y- February 3, 1983 piN#jbiXig Now more than ever, were right for 1 you! WITH THE FRIENDLIEST I _ . and CLEANEST STORES y »/ / w ifi* ' wtL " I •*- pr r -'-fT J 7’/40Z. BOX KRAFT l'/s-Liter Btl. WD BRAND U S. CHOICE BEEF MAC. Sr CHEESE .39c i6-oz. Btis. ctn. ot 8 12-02. cans GALLO WINF CUBED STEAK., lb. 2 w PEPSICOLA SCHLITZ BEER Ao?T »—» *«. •»*-«.* - Chablis Blanc - Rhine - N. Y. STRIPS ... 18. *2 9# SALrT? . 5. f . . 32C 1 •« v - Hearty Burdundy P&D |CM SHRIMP lb *2" *ltoz: MW® VfIEOETABIES _.... B ll^**^?!**A r \”~r,r.F f m mo-oz white potatoes cans B M6-OZ. APPLESAUCE FOR I^HlßEHl^^M^^xtlli^^^^W I *I6OOZ. ASTOR FRUIT **~° z - THRIFTY MAID L I COSCLML STEMS A PIECES IF- • Xi T SB. I mushrooms O r . MC SM |r Ufl Irl* A J I *I6—OZ. THRIFTY MAID *l6-OZ. PRICE BREAKER CANSV ] F jfl | PtACKS CHIU WITH BEANS •• • • Ufa FOR ■ ■ Imß HARVEST FRESH GREEN 4.5 LB. BAG FROZEN SHOESTRING 1-LB. QTRS. SUPERBRAND cm OW CABBAGE ib.l9c POTATOES H M MARGARINE 3 for99© CRAB LEGS lb M 49 HARVEST FRESH CURED SWEET 24-OZ. BAG DIXIANA SOUP MIX OR STEW BOZ. CUP SUPERBRAND PINKY PIG SLICED QUARTER POTATOES lb. 15c VEGETABLES M 49 SOUR CREAM forH PORK LOINS lb M M GRAPEFRUIT 3 for 99c PATTIES *2" SHEDDS SPREAD 99c STEAKS $ 3 49 HARVESTFRESH 16-OZ. SIZE EARTH GRAIN «3J^^ E ?. DE P tita WINGS BROCCOLI .bunch9Bc GARLIC BREAD .. 69c H 59 DRUMSTICKS .. lb. 39c Your Winn-Dixie jjjjODDS AS OF I Produce Patch M». se i mgigap i'qg 7 WI Klau/ Pontl IfAlk ’•' : - :/ lii'WVl - HmoJQ ZQH laQ.W/lttl JOISUII sttH±L y a HU” ruUIUIUa... , -r*KMn wmq 622 flsvioi mum 7/in tsarP-OOSE, UNPACKAGED,!!#' kHM A PRODUCEi ~B~^^~^|p Jerry Boucher Northside Shopping Center Manager Edenton, N.C. Page 5-B Letter To The Editor Dear Editor, As I am sure you are aware, one of the most, important pieces of legislation that will be considered in the 1983 ses sion of the General Assembly is a bill concerning nuclear proliferation. This legislation will ask the President and Congress to work vigorously for a verifiable, bilateral freeze on nuclear weapons with the Soviet Union. Similar resolutions have been passed by the City Councils of Raleigh, Greensboro. Winston-Salem, Durham, and Charlotte, and is supported by many prominent North Carolinians, including Marse Grant, Herbert O’Keef, James F. Berry (Col., USAF ret.), Dr. William Rogers, McNeill and Louise Smith, Dr. John Caldwell, and Shirley Frye. Also supporting this measure are quite a number of our citizens who have been singled out for special honors and recognition. Among these are North Carolina’s Mother of the Year for 1982, Mrs. Helen Haft Goldstein. Mrs. Goldstein has prepared the enclosed letter to be cir culated to the news media in North Carolina because as she states, “children con stitute man’s eternity.” In the following weeks we will be sharing with you and your readers letters from other special North Carolina people. Dale M. Evarts Coordinator for Freeze To The Editor To The Editor: 1982 was an eventful year for me. I was selected as the North Carolina Mother of the Year. This honor gave me an opportunity to speak with many diverse groups about the future of the family. The warm response I received reaffirmed my recognition of the values and ideals held by so many conscientious parents. As is writen in Psalms: 127, ' Lo, Children are a Heritage of the Lord, ’’childrenconstitute man’s eternity. We cannot allow our children and our grandchildren to perish. We must prevent the use of any and all nuclear weapons. Most of us have devoted a great deal of energy and ef fort toward making life better for our children. We MIV6 made strides in improving their physical and emotional health as well as ensUfiAfl that they had a good edU9l= tion. Yet all this could destroyed in just a minutes by a nuclear war! During World War 11, I join ed the WAVES, USNR, because I thought that OUT fight for moral principles and for the survival of democracy was going to prevent all future wars. I thought that we, as a civilized nation bas ed on the ethics of brotherhood, would nevW again permit the slaughter and senseless destruction to occur. Yet here we are on the brink of a nuclear war. Wfe must work together through our elected leader* to prevent a further build-up 0f nuclear weapons! It is in OUF hinds to be the creators Ot a more glorious future for our children, not to be the ar chitects of their nuclear destruction. Helen Haft Goldstein P.O. Box 852 Carv. NC 27511 (919)4467-6836 Convention The Ruritan National Con vention was held January 6-8, 1983, at the Atlanta Hilton and Towers in Atlanta, Georgia. Delegates representing the Advamce Ruritan Club in Chov/an County were Mr. and Mrs. Ray Goodwin and Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Perry. Primary business was the election of the 1963 Ruritan National Officers. Guests ad dr esoing the convention were Jacquelyn Mayer Townsend, Miss America of 1963, and Wilrner Mizell, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture and former pitcher for the 1960 World Champion Pittsburg Pirsites. The 1984 Ruritan National Convention is scheduled for January 19-21, at the Opryland Hotel. Nashville, Termesee.