Thursday, February 3, 19*3
DON'T BE
\M FOOLED BY
CLAIMS OF
FOOD PRICES”!
WINN-DIXIE URGES YOU TO JUDGE FOR YOURSELF!
Week After Week After Week, We Beat The Stores That
Claim To Be “LOWEST” In Head-To-Head Price Comparisons.
Items Listed Below Were Purchased On The
Same Day At Each Store And Are Shown On
I Each Receipt In The Same Order As Listed.
"" THE Tr E^ 1 I r
?Lank you 1 n
TH 01/2S/S3l I FOOD TOWN
I 25-lb. Purina Dog Food I I
-n f>. r M I 5-lb. Store Brand Frozen French Fries I LFPINC/SC/ JW/ga I
cut i-i'p I 5-lb. Store Brand Sugar I 01/28/83 I
l l wl 18-oz. Kellogg's Com Flakes f pepilhpP 7 -» o I
'.l 2-llter Pepsi Cola I grocery
I 21ITPEPST .SJI 24-oz. Hunt's Ketchup Igwgv \ 59L L I
-1 fSi •»£ 1 9-oz. Store Brand Sausage Pizza I grocery -—.-9 l. I
I „ .1 24-oz. French's Mustard /perishbl .
I nusTftßO rr .■*£l 18-oz. Peter Pan Peanut Butter & i I
l i:«| 48-oz. crisco fa i:Si L |
I white aouo - 4-pak White Cloud Bathroom Tissue I non-food ?J 9 l I
I slice cheese 1 12-oz. Store Brand Sliced Cheese Iperishbl ij; , D I
I Wlß \ai/.99 I Store Brand Large Eggs I «Iat SHBL l I
I 1201 uo FRK i.o9t I 12-oz. Store Brand Franks I non-food i\ 19 i I
I muERBEER Ctn. of 6/12-oz.Btls.Miller Beer /grocery fjf. 0 |
I GROCRY d cifw 59ft I 16-oz. bag Maxwell House Coffee | non-food ' 69 d f
I SS 41 Gol. Jug Itore Brand Bleach /■» ,39 l I
1 TftX 12-oz. Store Brand Bologna |4 ,/B tax AL 3011 I
1 ' Tom ».*1 | roW 31. M I
/ WINN-DIXIE TOTAL FOOD TOWN TOTAL
Winn-Dixie's Combination Os EVERYDAY LOW PRICEBREAKERS,
And DEEP-CUT PRICE BREAKER SPECIALS
Offer You Unbeatable Savings.
Make your own comparison and you'll discover what
hundreds of thousands of Winn-Dixie Shoppers
already kn0w.....
/
NOBODY SAVES YOU
MORE THAN WINN-DIXIE!
I'. • • >
•PRICE SURVEY DON! ON 1-28-83. SOME PRICES MAY HAVE CHANGE) SINCE THAT TIME.
THE CHOWAN HERALD
By Dr. J.W. Pou
What’s ahead for
agriculture over the next
decade? , «
There’s no crystal ball
available to provide the
answer. But Dr. J.E. Legates,
Dean of the School of
Agriculture and Life Sciences
at North Carolina State
University, believes most of
the trends evident in the past
few years will continue. -
“Four E’s—Exports,
Energy, Efficiency and the
Environment—will be in the
forefront,’’ Legates said.
Specifically, he predicted
that:
•Farms, particularly in the
Southeast, will continue to
become fewer and larger.
•Enterprises will become
more specialized and inten
sive as new energy-sparing
technology emerges.
•Capital investment per
farm will continue to rise and
sound financial management
will be essential.
•Enlargement and concen
tration of individual livestock
and poultry enterprises will
continue to make waste
disposal a critical concern.
•Integrated pest manage
ment programs will become
necessary to reduce costs and
chemical usage.
•Land and water manage
ment will have to be carried
out with renewed vigor.
•External pressures beyond
the agricultural community
will have an increasing im
pact oik farming.
There is a bright future for
agriculture during the rest of
the 'M’s,” Legates said. “The
number of people in the
Unites States and the world
needing food and fiber con
tinues to increase.”
The agricultural educator
said world food supply cur
rently depends predominant
ly on our four species of plants
and three animal species. The
plants are corn, wheat, rice
and soybeans. The animals
are cattle, swine and poultry.
“Science and technology
must be directed to enhance
the output of these species by
placing advanced information
in 'the hands of farmers,”-
tji xi ii yni F&ptWffM-—-'l-'-LV.:
• A century ago, according to
U.S. Department of
Agriculture estimates, labor
accounted for 62 per cent of
inputs used in American
agriculture, and land and
capital accounted for 19 per
cent each.
Today, USDA estimates,
capital accounts for 62 per
cent of inputs, real estate 22
per cent, and labor only 16 per
cent.
The application of “science
power” to farming has in
creased the need for capital,
reduced the need for workers,
and made it possible for only
3 per cent of the population to
produce abundant supplies of
food and fiber for domestic
use and for export.
It has also enabled con
sumers in this country, he
said, to enjoy the best, most
varied and most plentiful food
supply in the world at a
reasonable cost amounting to
less than 17 per cent of their
disposable or after-tax per
sonal income.
As for the four “E’s” affec
ting agriculture’s future,
Legates said: “Energy will
permeate every decision we
make in agriculture.
“Our greatest potential for
reducing the almost total
dependence of N.C.
agriculture on petroleum
based fuel rests with wood
and solar energy.”
He said the equivalent of ISO
million gallons of fuel oil is
now required to cure the
state’s flue-cured tobacco
crop. But this need exists bet
ween June and September,
which coincides with the
highest level of solar
radiation.
“We should be able to
capitalize on this potential for
solar drying during the
1980 s,” he said. “Meanwhile
,' we must continue to develop
and apply energy-efficient
technologies.”
Exports are important, the
NCSU official said, because
the output frofn 80 pep-cent or
more of U.J. tillfd applapd is
shipped abroad. If foreign
markets were lo6t, be said,
American agriculture would
have to undergo a drastic cut
back and it would lose much
of its efficiency.
Environmental regulations
put into effect during and
since 1870 have in many cases
Farm Report
had an unfavorable impact on t
farm production levels and >
profits. “We need to protect
the environment, but regula
tions must be reasonable and -
must be drafted and enforced
with the needs of agriculture
in mind,” he said.
Efficiency in agriculture
will become increasingly im
portant in the years ahead,
Legates said. He added that
America can continue to feed
its own people and millions
abroad only by giving strong
support to agricultural
research and education so
that needed technologies can
be developed and applied.
Lawrence Defeats
Ridgecroft
The Lawrence Academy
Varsity Boys had a .500 week
as they beat conference rival
Ridgecroft School on Tuesday
64-58 and then had a disap
pointing 59-55 loss to Hobgood
on Friday.
The game with Ridgecroft
started slowly for the War
riors as they were out scored
20-14 in the first quarter.
However the second quarter
was just the opposite. The
Warriors not only outscored
the Rams but also began to
get the Ridgecroft team in
deep fouls. The third quarter
saw the Warrior lead jump to
51-40. Six Lawrence boys
scored in that period. The
fourth period was a dogfight
as'the Warriors went 3-10
from the line allowing
Ridgecroft to close the gap.
The Warriors managed to
hold on at the end as they
broke the Ridgecroft press for
a couple of easy baskets and
came away with the 64-58 Win.
The Warrior scoring was Jead
by Mark Oliver’s 17 points. He
was followed in the scoring by
Jason Holton’s 14 points, Brad
Brown with 10, Kevin
Copeland 8, Jon Powell 7, Jeff
Powell 6, and Tony Dail 2. Jeff
Futrell lead Ridgecroft with
19 points. The win leaves
Lawrence in first place in the
Tarheel Independent Con
ference with a record of 5-1.
On Friday, the Warriors
traveled to Hobgood and
dominated most of the first
three quarters of the game
before falling 59-55. The story
of the game is the same story
that tells of many close
games: the team that shoots
the best from the foul line will
win the game. This was cer
tainly the case Friday as the
Raiders hit 13 of 19 for the
game and 6 for 6 the fourth
quarter while the Warriors hit
only 7-16 and 2 of 6 in the
fourth quarter. The Lawrence
team had gone into the fourth
quarter with an eight point
lead, 45-37. However the foul
shooting and outside shooting
of Hobgood allowed them to
out score Lawrence 22-10 over
the last eight minutes and win
the game 59-55. The scoring
for Lawrence was Mark
Oliver 16, Jason Holton 11,
Jon Powell 9, Kevin Copeland
7, Brad Brown 6, Jeff Powell
4, and Tony Dail 2. The
Hobgood team was lead by
Ron Faithful’s 14 points. The
loss left the Warriors with a
10-9 overall record.
In J.V. action for the week
the Warriors had an 0-2 week
as they fell behind Ridgecroft
on Tuesday by a score of 25-9
after the first quarter before
losing 57-45. Friday’s game
was much tighter as the
Hobgood and Lawrence
teams battled to a 29-29 tie in
regulation before falling 35-31
after the overtime period. The
loss to Ridgecroft leaves the
J.V. Warriors at 3-3 in the
conference.
Auditions For
Summer Jobs
CHAPEL HlLL—Regional
auditions for summer jobs in
12 of the nation’s largest out
door historical dramas will be
held by the Institute of Out?
door Drama at the Universi
ty of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill on March 26.
Two of North Carolina’s in
door summer companies, the
N.C. Shakespeare Festival in
High Point and the East
Carolina Summer Theatre in
Greenville, also will audition
singers, actors and dancers at
the same time.
The outdoor dramas
typically offer employment
for three weeks of rehearsals
and an eight- to 10-week
season. Some also offer addi
tional productions, such as
new plays or children's
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