Newspapers / The Carolina Indian Voice … / July 12, 1984, edition 1 / Page 12
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nxani THE HILLS NEAREST YOU Union Chapel Road PEMBROKE, N.C. s*mtamo nukhmkm m esujushtd s*?tvano j hutchinson (D ?*tm ? i'? mut tsu^lshed - - . / r - - - * t s?trr ano | hutchinson > I j ? ?p?irsrmiumniiM.-mi.uu in i imm w lint iixifci: i i, <fr,yrRf? < ?K .vvim m.< ;v <| KnA TIN* ?OH I* UCAL Tt?M? RVI ?M ku Mm *fUt Ul WMII SAVE 20.77 IN THIS AD 2 ^ IMKWKY IK*JAM B 28401835 B SAVE 20.77 IN THIS AD ?5 ft If MY AMD J HUTCHINSON S IT?i ?UJ . jsujishk) skwvand - HUTCHINSON ; I >/lwut > CSTAJ^O \ SfCMNANO < HUTCHINSON ; if vou are one of the 125*000 people who shop Hills this week you'll *?ve $20.77 on Items in this ad, plus additional savings on our everyday low prices, on items^$ & H Creen stamps wlth every purchase. NEW PAVUCHT SAVINGS HOURS: MQN.-SAT.-7:00 A.M.-10:00 P.M. ? HILLS WELCOMES USDA FOOD STAMPS ? WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ? PRICES COOO THROUGH JULY 15 Fresh Grade "A" ^ Baking Wj Hens -^1 X -jjk ^ UMfT 2 ' II ^ ^W PLEASE ? 6-8 LB W ^ ^ ?? AVERAGE V ? V LB. ' ^| cut-up Hens lb #y CBS Finest Meats Hills Choice Whole Boneless N.Y. Strip ?p^2.99 N.Y. strip Steak LB 3.99 Penders ?, ? Barbeaue cup 1.79 Sunnyland Beef/Reg. Jumbo Franks lb 1.59 _ Red Band J Flour , ' 1 Blaiw m* ? B J rRIW) ?? S?R? tLB I LIMIT 1 WITH $10 OR MORE ORDER | CBB Frozen Foods Hills ice cream 1.39 Va-CAL. Coble Popsides i2pk 99c Banquet (Beef, Chick, Turk.) . Pot Pies S/1?? Mrs. Smith s Natural Juice Apple Pie 3.z2.79 Fine Fare Frozen specials Green Peas, Mixed vegetables, Cut corn YOUR ?? CHOICE 16-oz. ^ bag m mm Coke, Diet Coke m m0* Sun Drop 2 lt1.19 W^'P'U'll 1 II - $10 OB MORE ORDER t choice whole Sirloin | TipS \ ^ Tip Roast LB 1,99 Tip Shame LB I.OI Hills Meats Specials Bacon SLICED 1-LB. 1.49 Bologna SLICED. . 1-LB. 1.29 Franks . .. ,12-OZ. 99C Cooked Ham oi l.59 sausagesmokeo... lb.1.19 Sunnyland Beef/Reg./Thk. _ _ Bologna hb 1.59 Hills Fresh Grade "A" Medium Eggs / DOZ 1 : HI Grocery items FAYGO Beverages 2-LT. 69C Red stone Party Dips ... .8-OZ. *F9 Citrus Hill Orange Juice . .. 64-OZ. 1.29 Hein2 Catsup qt99c Delta Bath Tissue * pk 79c Jeiio _ ? Pudding pops . .?-pk 1.99 wlse Potato Chips ... . 6Vi-OZ. 99 Keebler Crackers Town House . 16-OZ. 1*55 Old Milwaukee Beer . . .12-OZ./12-PK. 3.99 Natural Light Bqer ... .12-OZ./12-PK. 4.69 Tall can zest Pink Salmon F I * ecu Whole stiamc Hair lb *.s? Butt Half LB i.w Oscar Mayer specials weiners i-lb. 1.79 Beef Franks 1 lb. 1.89 Cheese Hot Dog 1 -lb. 1.99 BOlOgnaREC or beef 8-oz. 1.09 cooked Ham e-oz. 1.59 Big top Franks 12-oz. 79^ Big top Bologna 1 lb 99* Sunnyland _ _ Cooked Ham .... 10-oz. 2.49 4b Too BB3 Fresh Produce Dole Fresh Pineapple 99 Red Delicious Apples72-cT. i.69c Fresh Juicy Nectarines lb 59c Rec* Plums lb59c * Yellow . Onions i%99c Quaker Ouik Grits !ac99c Pillsbury Buttermilk Biscuits .... 6-a. ? ?* ! white House Apple Juice m-oz.1.39 Fine Fare Fruit cocktail <Sn69( i 1 Fine Fare Sugar : BAG 1 LIMIT 1 WITH $10 Oft MORE ORDER ?? 4anager>Harvajr (Mwk, Jr.; Co-Manager-Baady Midfcii larket Manager-Wttaro Gary lnU?m Produce -FMafe Bookkecper-Sarm Locklcv* Politicians grace Homecoming route Lacy Thornbnrg, democratic candidate far attorney general waa one of a number of poRtical flgnrea who rede h the parade Saturday and visited daring homecoming. Thombarg also took in opening night of 'Strike at the Wind!' Saturday night. Tommy Rhodes, New Hanover legislator, and a Republican candidate for the 7th congreaeional a eat, also visited daring homecoming activities and rode in the parade. Thornbnrg is shown with hia wife and son, and was accompanied by SherifTs Deputy Garth Loddear and local attorney Dexter Brooks. [Elmer W. Hunt photo] Gin gets its name from a corruption of the French word genievre, or 'juniper," the source of gin's characteristic flavor. No part of Greece is more than 85 miles from the sea. Rural Electric Legislation Would Keeo LREMC and other EMC's Strong A bill now making its way :hrough Congress would have Lumbee River EMC pay ?lightly higher interest rates >n loans from the Rural Electric Administration (REA) in order to maintain a major source of financing for the 1.000 rural EMC systems in the United States. The aim of the "Self sufficiency Act" is to preserve he II-year old REA Revolv ng Fund while making as few :hanges as possible in the lation s rural electric pro gram. "Rural electrification works ind we want to keep it that vay." says Ronnie Hunt, -umbee River EMC general nanager. "This bill will cor 'ect an imbalance in the >ystem so that the program ran continue into the next ?entury. Without it, we would tave a very hard time serving leavier electric loads and new esidents in the area." Lumbee River EMC serves ipproximately 21.000 ac- ] ounts in Robeson. Cumber- i and, Hoke, and Scotland < -ounties. It is headquartered , n Red Springs. The U.S. House of Repre sentatives passed the bill by 1 in overwhelming vote of 183-111 on March 1. The egislation has 46 Senate 'o-sponsors, and is awaiting ull Senate consideration. The REA Revolving Fund is I i government account that vas set up in 1973 to replace a I 18-year-old program of rural ! rlectric loans that were ap iropriated from the U.S. Treasury. The fund loans noney at five percent interest o such systems as Lumbee liver EMC to finance about r? Percent of its efforts to ;xtend and upgrade electric ines and repair, replace and mprove equipment. The oth ;r 30 percent must come from ion-government sources, rurrently the REA approves >850 million a year in electric cans from the Revolving Mind. The fund, established to be -elf-contained, was to repten sh itself through loan p+ nents. Then in the 1970s, ecord inflation and high merest rates put unexpected itrains on the Revolving ?ur"t The interest expenses of the fund began exceeding interest income, setting it on a course toward bankruptcy sometime after the year 2000. unless something was done. After spending a year stu dying the problem, rural EMC leaders filed a report (hat led to the Self-Sufficiency Act. which was introduced in the spring of 1983 by Senator Walter Huddleton (D-Ky) in the Senate and by Repre sentative Ed Jones (D-Tn) in the House. The bill has two major provisions to keep the Re volving Fund self-sufficient. One would raise the interest rate on REA loans enough to keep interest income in ba lance with interest expense. Under current economic con ditions. that would mean somewhere between 6.5 per cent and 8 percent. The second part of the bill would protect the assets of the Revolving Fund. Under cur rent law some S7.9 billion worth of Revolving Fund assets would be transferred to the Treasury at the rate of about $250 million a year beginning in 1993 and ending in 2017. The Self-Sufficiency Act would retain those assets. "That money will still be long to the government," says Hunt. "This bill simply keeps the assets in the Re volving Fund where they can be used and reused for EMC loans. In the general fund of the Treasury, they would be spent once and be gone forever. And they would pro bably be spent on something less valuable than lights for rural America." "This bill is called the Self-Sufficiency Act because it preserves a self-sustaining source of financing without any new federal programs." says Hunt. "The utility bus iness is a tough one. and its tougher in rural areas where there aren't as many con sumers to help cover system overhead. Already. EMC consumers pay an average nationwide of 14.5 percent higher rates than their neigh boring citv electric company. This bill will help keep that from getting further out of line." A
The Carolina Indian Voice (Pembroke, N.C.)
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July 12, 1984, edition 1
12
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