Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / March 13, 1975, edition 1 / Page 8
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WW PRICES SIASHED WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES SUPER BUYS...SUPER SAVINGS! PRICES IN THIS AD EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY. MARCH IS AT A&P IN RAEFORD. St TROPICANA I St MARVEL Orange Juice I WhiteBread A&P I St NUTLEY Sugar I Margarine UMIT 6 LOAVES WITH $10 OR MORE PURCHASE 5a$229? o* I ?j Og< 9 mm mop* ?*??**? M ' ' ALL PURPOSE AHgood Brand | EI# WHITE Potatoes 10 s. 47? UMIT 4 WITH $10 OR MORE PURCHASE LIMIT 3 WITH $10 OR MORE PURCHASE ANN PAGE W a SUPERB BLEND RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES Mayonnaise |j?9ht ?'cl0Ck Coffee r 99? 1^89? v.; l259 A&P INSTANT NONFAT ? JANE PARKER HOT DOG OR Dry -? mAo I Hamb"rger Vlilk st ^3 1 Rolls 3 $1 I SALE hot available to other RETAIL I 1^, Mix Or Match Sate WA&P CRACKERS WSUPERFINE * = I .-^mneLc l^LrBea W0 UP .LAW OR ? 1-U. 4.QC I i 9 16-07. OOC CoUHMiv ?o. U ^*5/ "*3^ ? WHITE O ?? oaiaamix p*? ? Sultana ? superfine Avocados I ^&Beans I ShoefcgCorn 3fo?$i I a5 ts $1 l"""7 3 '?2 98? p'SUPER-WO KT" HCAVT WESTERN SRAM FED KB "SUPER-RIGHT" GRAIN FED DaooI- ?^111 fresh Pork Picnics ? 65? KOaSt ass "OOI SkMessFranks %*1*? ST. PATRICK S DAY MEAT VALUES?ASP ? ASP Corned Beef Brisket ?. $1" I Sliced Bologna % 99? IY THE PIECE "SUPER-RIGHT" HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEff I A&P |_jv6f SdUSdQ? lb 59? . CHUCK / SULTAM FROZEN HUT OieaK " ? / O 1 Dinners ?. 'tf 49?, Pepsi Cola or Coca Cola Carton of 6 REGULAR OR CRINKLE CUT SAVE 20c WITH COUPON BELOW Frozen French Fried A&P Potatoes 5 98' A*P MO COUPON AAP FROZEN French Fried Potatoes a5a98? Hoke ASCS by Thomas R. Burgess ? 975 FLUE-CURED TOBACCO PROGRAM ? Income from the production of flue-cured tobacco continues to be the principal source of farm income in North Carolina. Flue-cured tobacco producers are now making final plans for their 1975 crop. Some of the key featuresof the 1975 program that growers need to remember as they complete plans for this year. Basic farm quotas were increased by 15% for 1975. Individual notices giving the acreage and quotas have been mailed to all producers. Flue-cured growers will not be required to stay within their allotments in order to qualify for price support on up to 110% of their basic quota in 1975 marketings. Producers may market up to 110%. of the farm's poundage quota without penalty. However, any sales above 100% will be deducted from the 1976 quota. Sales above 110% are subject lo marketing quota penalties. The ban on the use of DDT and TDE is continued in 1975. Producers must certify they have not used these pesticides if they are to be eligible for price support. The discount variety program is also in effect for 1975. Price support on these varieties will be at 50% of the rate of acceptable varieties. Flue-cured tobacco may be transferred by lease from one farm lo another farm within the county. This feature will remain as in previous years. The grower designation of markets initiated in 1974 will be continued in 1975. The sign-up period for growers to designate markets will begin March 3 and continue through April 4. These are only a lew of the key features of the 1975 flue-cured tobacco program. Any grower with questions about any phase of the program should contact their local ASCS Office. TRANSFER 01 ALLOTMENTS The time of year has arrived w hen many North Carolina farmers are finali/.ing their plans lo lease and transfer cotton and tobacco allotments from one farm to another in order lo take better advantage of their land, equipment, labor, etc. Therefore, producers arc reminded of several important facts concerning lease and transfer and of their responsibilities in the transaction. I. r i.utll'KIU IOBACCO ALLOTMENT AND QUOTA can be leased and transferred within a given county for a period of from oik to live years. The final date for filing an application with the County ASC'S office is November 30 of the current crop year. Additional restrictions or eligibility requirements appls to transfers filed after June 14 wheic transferring farms have a basic quota ot more than 2.000. 2. COTTON . ALLOTMENT may be transferred l>> either lease or sale, bach counts committee makes the determination on out-of county transfers lor its counts. The final dale Tor filing an application is March 10 in Western counties and April 1 in Hasten) counties. This is also the final date to release cotton acreage or request cotton acreage from the county's "released Pool." Local county ASCS offices maintain bulletin boards as a service to producers who wish to lease allotment or quota either to their farm or away from their farm. Also, the emp1 >v es of I: offices are most msiousi- ??. !? p ? anyone who wants information on 11< transfer of allotment or quota. USD A DEC'RI -ASKS LOAN INTEREST RATES -- Acting Secretary of Agriculture J. Phil Campbell on March 4 announced a decrease.effective April 1. in tho interest rate on U.S. Department of Agriculture price support commodity loans and storage facility and drying equipment loans. The decrease, from 9.375 to 9.125 per cent pei annum, reflects a decrease to the Commodity Credit Corporation in the cost of money that it borrows. The decreased rate of interest will apply to outstanding loans, for which applications have been received on or after Oct. I. 1974. and to new loans disbursed on and al ter April I I he adjustment of the interest rate on outstanding loans is in accordance with the policy announced last Oct. I. The first International Conference ol Girl Guides and Girl Scouts was held at Oxford. England, in 19 20 UNh'XPT CD-ID INTRUSION - A car crashed into the front of the Super Dollar Store on South Main early Saturday morning, breaking the glass. From The Home Agent's Desk By Ellen Willis & Brenda Canudv Hint Don't throw away your old powder puffs. Instead wash thein in soapy water, rinse well, and then thoroughly dry. Use them for polishing silverware, copper, or brass. Schedule Wednesday - Thursday, March 12-13, Mrs. Willis and Mrs. Herman Koonce will attend Cultural Arts Seminar in Winston Salem. Thursday, March 13. 3:00 P.M. Allen d ale - A n t ioch Extension Homemakers meeting with Mrs. John Schcll. Monday. March 17, 8.30 A.M. Staff Conference. Monday. March 17.7:30 P.M. Phillipi Extension Homemakers meeting with Mrs. June Rogers. Tuesday, March 18, 12:10 P.M. Group will meet in kitchen of County Office Building. Wednesday. March 19, 9:00 A.M. Interagency Council meeting. Super Snackin' This is an exciting time, nutritionally, in man's history. For centuries -- his main concern has been eating enough food for survival. If he ate enough, lie lived: if the quantity dropped below his needs, he died. The amount of food available determined whether an infant survived, as well as the adult's productiveness and life expectancy. Today's American family need no longer worry about the quantity available. The supply is plentiful. Except for those in extreme poverty or those of means who t.cglect their food choices ? eveiyoit. ' the opportunity to improve his li . ' by eating a better diet. Uin thoughts .'.ill tuiw turn to the quality of loud .is it affects the quality of life. The supermarket offers a wide variety of choices - perhaps too many for some of us to handle. Kive thousand television commercials a year tell the child about candies, soft drinks and other "fun" foods, but hardly anything about their nutritive value or what other foods need to be eaten with them. Teenagers are in even worse shape nutritionally. Because of the teenage growth spuit. they need more food and nutrients than at any other time of life except inlancy. Unfortunately, many teens fill up on hamburgers, fries, soft drinks and candy. There's nothing wrong willi these foods, except wlien they become the only items in the diet. Teenagers need fruits, vegetables, milk and other dairy foods, as well as fats and carbohydrates. Teens no longer eat most of their meals at home, nor do they depend upon three meals a day. Instead, snacks and numerous mini-meals typify teenage eating liabits, intensifying their need for knowledge about nutrition. Recent studies on teenage nutrition * reveal that about 60 percent of the girls and 40 percent of the boys have inadequate diets. These studies also show that typical teenage diets are below - Recommended Dietary i Allowances for calcium, vitamin A and vitamin C. Teens eat when they are hungry. Consequently, they eat foods available at the drop of a coin or the pull of a cupboard or refrigerator door. Instead of criticizing them for eating these foods, i.e., those high in sugar and fat, encourage teens to snack on foods that are better for them and available just as quickly. It's as easy to reach for fresh fruits, vegetables, cheese or a sandwich as it is for foods that arc predominantly sugar or fat. 976,469 Cars Fail Inspection Over one-third of the 3.426.11! automobiles inspected in North Carolina during 1974. failed to pass their original examination, according to Jake Alexander. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. Figures compiled by the enforcement and theft division of Motor Vehicles, show that 976,469 vehicles of the 1974 total ? had equipment defects. Enforcement and: theft administers the automobile inspectidn programAeqnircd by the state. lights, including headlights and others, topped the list of defective equipment with a total of 758,599. Directional indicators ranked second with 136.127. Other equipment found defective included wipers. 92,007; foot brakes. 82,777; tires, 81,972; horns, 29.510 and steering mechanisms. 16.653. There were 5,974 stations and I 7.968 mechanics licensed to inspect motor vehicles in North Carolina for the 1974 period. Classes Out Early Classes were dismissed early in all schools Tuesday so thai teachers could attend a meeting lloke Mirth principal Allen Edwards reported. Students were excused at 2:30 P.M. and all teachers required in he at the meeting, held at I 'pcluirch School. J.H. AUSTIN INSURANCE SINCE 1950 ?/ AUTO - FIRE - LIFF CASUALTY 114 W. EOINBOROUGH AVE. PHONE 875 3667 Hamburgers 30< Hot Dogs 30< Snak Pale 99< AT THK UTTiK MINT JVi^SliS> IN RAIFOftD
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 13, 1975, edition 1
8
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