Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Feb. 20, 1975, edition 1 / Page 14
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II ? t.wiwwn ? ? ? > .W, PRICES IN THIS AD ITfMS ??"???? ?? EFFECTIVE THRU U MOT AVAIL SATURDAY, AMJ 10 ??'* 22 AT AAP IN A JL ? ^5rrAIL RAEFORD.N.C V^M k I5fl ? B *N? ? ? | WMOUSALIKS AP SULTANA FLAKE TUNA-2 89* ^?jwnmse^H MAYONNAISE M99* misam. QUART JAR uieo WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES SAVINGS YOU CAN SEE -TOP QUALITY TOO! STOKELY S CUT GREEN BEANS 1 2 78c / B van Camp s BEANEE WEENEES 3 'o.0; SI W A SUPIRB BUND, RICH *4 BRAZILIAN COFFEES L EIGHT O'CLOCK SCOFFEE ri99J2" WHITE ALL PURPOSE POTATOES 20 - 98<| FLORIDA INDIAN RIVKR SIKDLDS WHITE GRAPEFRUIT 9 & 99c 1 FRISH CRISP FLORIDA CELERY 2 *?? 37c 1 RED TOMATOES c.^ 39c 1 WASHINGTON GOLDEN DILICIOUS^^ r ^ ? APPLES your Lb? Cm WISTIRN ANJOU CHOICE ^ M ? PEARS ?^?v IV ^IBREi # MARVEL Ol'/i-Lb. SANDWICH J Loavei SLICED ^ ad m !| if A&P Saltines 49c VLb.Pkg. ? W W JANE PARKER JANE PARKER?PIACM OR CINNAMON ROLLS '?;J* 59c CHERRY PIE JANE PARKER - REG , RIPPLE JANE PARKER - SEEDED POTATO CHIPS V<V 69c RYE BREAD 2 If.0, JANE PARKER DINNER . g ROLLS 4 *1 '? 99c 99c HORMLL Vienna Sausage 3 M00 4^^ 5 O/. Cans? "SUPER-RIGHT' HEAVY WKSTKRN GRAIN FID BIKF^^. KRAFT AI7Q VELVEETA CHEESE "SUPIR-RIGHT" HEAVY W ROAST STEAKS Oft * Oft ^I AO .TOP ROUND u, ? J BONELESS ROUND Lb IRUZIR QUI IN FROZEN . CK.r-Br.tWd l?f P.tti.i 2 Lb. Pka AAr AlL MtAT MEAT ENTREES ;?rr?.? S1.19 SKINLESS FRANKS $1.59 Tiirtwy Cutfat with Gravy ? Sliced TurVay AtP SULTANA FROZEN SLICED BOLOGNA V? 99c MEAT PIES 4 ft? 99c A1P AGP BUTTER LIVER SAUSAGE 'Wu 69c BASTED TURKEYS V:^ 59c GRADE A Vsilkii BACOK jg $1.29 TURKEY PMTS:g; :^6?C m5\D0C foi J?\ 6 88' A&P CHILLED ORANGE JUICE 73', 1 I W 10c OFF LABEL ON [CHEERS: T 13c OFF LABEL ON 1 JOY?-70* ? 20c OFF LABEL ON ILUX?-95* 25c OPP LABEL HEAVY DUTY | LIQUID LAUNDRY WW J?? r, Psychiatrist Viktor Frank! observed in a Nazi concentration camp that often the key to survival was to be found in the prisoner's hope or lack of hope. If hope was destroyed in the prisoner, death was soon likely to follow. Another illustration was given to me by a prominent cancer expert. A patient with a cancer that was diagnosed as terminal was put on a new drug that was unproven in its results. The patient, however, believed in the drug and began to improve rapidly. Soon, he was able to leave the hospital and he seemed amazingly on the road to recovery. After he had enjoyed several months of apparent good health, a report appeared in the newspapers casting doubt on tire validity of the drug. Within a few weeks, some of his old symptoms reappeared and it wasn't long before he was back in the hospital, however, the physicians persuaded him to disregard the reports and try the drug again. This he did and soon he was out of the hospital again, apparently recovered. When he had resumed his normal life again and enjoyed several months of good health, the U.S. government released and published a report that indicated that the drug had been proven worthless in the cure of cancer. Soon after reading this report, the man returned to tire hospital and died. So long as he clung to it, he was saved by his hope. Whether or not the drug was actually effective in dealing with cancer, his hope mobilized tire cancer-fighting resources of his own body and, for a time, prevailed. Only when he lost his hope did his situation become truly hopeless. Someone has said that there are no hopeless situations, only people who have grown hopeless about them. What this means is that our hope is not to be dependent upon external conditions, but inner realities. What is really important is, not what happens to us, but how we respond to what happens to us. The source of our hope is always something inside us, not outside us. For example, the situation in which we find ourselves may seem hopeless. No matter where we look there is nothing but discouragement. This is not something imagined, but real. The stuation in which we find ourselves is really a bad one! Yet, no matter how bad the situation may be. there is always a reality that can overshadow the gloomiest prospects. As Paul puts it: "1 consider that the sufferings of the present time arc not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us" (Romans 8:18). The source of our hope, thus, is never to be found in what we find about us, but in "sharing thv glory of God" (Romans 5:2). Greater than any hardship we may know in the present is the great gift that God has promised us beyond the present circumstances. Therefore, we can take hope in the midst of our bad times because we are confident of the grace that God has in store for us. By looking ahead to what God has prepared for us, we can, in a sense, have a foretaste of the fulfillment of our hope in the future, and find the strength to prevail amidst the trials of the present. It is thus that we are saved by our hope. AUCTIONEER - Daniel H. DeVane, of Roe ford, is shown here accepting his diploma from Richard W. Dewees after completing the Auctioneering and Auction Sales Management course at the Missouri Auction School in Kansas City. DeVane has purchased the Bo bo Stables here and plans to convert It to an auction barn, he announced. BY JIM DEAN One look out the window squelched all the plans \ve'd made. Four inches of fresh snow lay on the ground and it was still coming down. By lunch, there would be eight inches. "We're not going to get those deer photographs today," said A.J. Johnson as he hovered beside the wood stove. He was right. Without four ? wheel drive, we would be foolish to try to drive 3,000 feet up the mountain to where N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission biologists were trying to trap deer for a whitetail restoration project in Madison County. So, we did the next best thing. We ate a leisurely breakfast (Johnson had oatmeal and 1 had two bowls of snow cream). We topped it off with about six cups of black coffee. By midday, the snow had turned to a frigid mixture of sleet and rain. Johnson went to the window for the 09th time and looked out over the white blanket that covered the meadow and the mountains. Snow covered the rocks in the distant stream. "I know it's going to sound crazy." mused Johnson restlessly, "but we could at least go fishing, it would be better than sitting around." I contemplated the odds. "Sitting around" has always been one of my favorite sports. Only a few things can compare. One is trout fishing. "You're nuts, you know that," 1 said as I climbed into my waders and got my gear together. We walked down the path and separated on the stream. Johnson started in on the pool above me. I walked down the bank, nearly falling several times as snow built up on the bottoms of my wading shoes (it is sort of like walking across a red mud field; the farther you walk, the taller you get). The water has to be warmer than the snow, I thought as I waded into the creek and began to fish. It wasn't, not much anyway. The stream thermometer read 38 degrees. From the knees down, my legs and feet felt like blocks of ice. Sleet and icy rain ran down my neck. I began to cast, using a large, weighted Tellico nymph. Tellicos are good flies during the winter and early spring. I could see Johnson in the pool ahead as he worked out a line and began to probe likely looking pockets. He was also using a Tellico. "Hey, come up here," he shouted. "I've got one." Indeed he did have a trout. It was a very encouraging 10-inch brown. I felt warmer for awhile, but it was false warmth. Soon, the cold crept back into my bones as we worked our way up the stream. Johnson's trout was the only catch we made in an hour of fishing. I was shivering like an Alaskan Go Go Girl when Johnson finally gave up and joined me on the bank. "1 believe," he said, "that I've enjoyed about all of this 1 can stand." Unquestionably, conditions were the worst I've ever seen although I've done other winter trout fishing in recent years. Most of the time, even in winter, a persistent trout fisherman can catch trout - even on flies. Given reasonable water conditions, you can often take trout with surprising regularity. I've even caught trout using dry flies on sunny winter days when the water temperature hovered in the 40s. Fisheries biologists and wildlife protectors have reported that winter fishermen who have taken advantage of the new 11 ? month season in North Carolina (closed February 28 to April 5) have been catching trout in many streams under "general" regulations using bait and spinners. Apparently, there is a pretty good population of "hold-over" stocked trout in many "general" streams, and of course, there are always wild fish in the "native" and "trophy" streams. If you decide to try your hand at winter trout fishing, try to pick a day when the weather is relatively mild and the water is not too high and dingy. Also, be sure to get your new 1975 fishing and trout licenses and check the regulations. Not only has the season been lengthened on "general" waters, these streams also have a new seven - inch minimum size limit on trout. Service News Land Bank Reports Loans A total of 1943 loans amounting to SI0.475,451 were made to farmers last year by Federal Land Bank Association of Lumberton. the president. Edward C. Sumner reported. The association serves farmers in Hoke, Robeson. Scotland. Cumberland. Columbus and Bladen counties. Directors include Duncan C. Malloy of Lumber Bridge, chairman; Thomas M. McRimmon of Rowland; Ralph M. Jolly of Tabor City ; Carey V. Downing of Fayetteville and Wilbur C. Ward of Clarkton. Cadett Milfred Robinson Cadett Milfred Robinson is in training at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. He will be reassigned following completion of his basic training. A graduate of Hoke High, Robinson is the son of Mrs. Nellie McMillan of Queenmore. An"Oh,No"is when you ^ have more payments than you have pay! An 'Oh.No!'' is when you've had lots of extra expenses But your brother has had even more That's why he's asking you to pay back the $100 you borrowed last August Don't battle all those bills alone We arrange loans that consolidate all your bills into one monthly payment We arrange loans for l.(X)l reasons. SAFEWAY FINANCE We like to soy "Yes to the Oh.No s! in your life LOANS TO $1,500 103 N. Main ? 875-4111 RAEFORD, N.C.
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Feb. 20, 1975, edition 1
14
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