OU SHOPPING HOARD'S FOOD CENTER IN PEEP RUN, SPIN HOWARD'S rrLvrr Save Money 8 e i * If 8 5 a. z ? PWZES Wtfj PRIZES : WIN PRIZES ^ i " PftOSTY 99? w m PKG. FROSTY MORN BACON 99* PKG. FROSTY MORN BOLOGNA n.\9 ?????? I Mmm?, Mmmmm 4 " mr ^hher(hi "' '+?/'? . ? ; '. : a - ? ; bis m 2? 1 i . >: 2j * ?:i ?. ? ... ... ? K . a m ' e ID E E i i a I i f ft jtu V' L This will probably be the last time we'll be able to sell fresh sausage this cheap. Tit Is, sausage Is made the old country way, ? right in ogr market, tela priced this week only. I .fi< rd ? a* -? -4tt-' '-.-dA- ?* m *r m ?fJteeB 110 LBS. OR MORE LB. 99< I (Umlt 10 lbs, to a suborner) ' ? We alto will ba tailing 10 Ibt. of *>hn Moral! SMOKED SAUSAGE THIS WEEK ONLY %J AO (Limit 10Ibitoaogftomar) ? # AIM we'll be selling I AIR DRIED SAUSAGE ] 10 LB. LOTS FOR* 1.29 LB. i i (WESTERN BEEF SALE Iround steak c J i T? -JE r ?^^'1 I SIRLOIN ST^AK ?. ?!.*$ I RIB STEAK lb. ?1.5*1 It-bone steak *i.aoI m K ? w am u M .SB. TT-n ? - ? W C .. M ? IM| Ipfe s-y^Vff 2 * 4 I J M - MB . TIGERS BLAST BURGAW RED DEVILS Uwto^V*MU?dla I (Reprinted from the Duplin IF Times of November 14.1952) Sparked by the running of t Hughie Lewis. Warsaw's r Tigers scored in the first F period and didn't stop until I the final whistle sounded as Kthey trounced Burgaw in Warsaw. 33-7. It was the last home game of the year foi ? the Tigers. Burgaw's Red Devils I managed vto score in the I second period and pull up to a 13-7 score, but that was as I > close as the Devils got all I? night. Mas Gricc. who was a defensive terror, recovered a r, Burgaw fumble on the Devil , 2<> to set up Warsaw's first - touchdown. On the first play I after the fumble. Gerald [ Jones skittered 2b yards for I the touchdown. I In the second quarter. L Lewis took the ball from the Burgaw 30 to the 27. picked I up 11 more yards and. then slantnicd to a first down on the Devil nine. Bill Carlton I passed to Grice for the score. and Tommy Rogers kicked | the point. ? ? Burgaw's score came on a t A'" , /is*.; Way. I drive from the Warsaw 43. The Devils drove to the one-foot line and Jimmy Basden crashed over for the TD. Lewis Meadows booted Burgaw's last point of the game. Warsaw came back in the second quarter to move ahead. Starting from their own 34. the Tigers moved fast and scored on a 46-yard pass play from Milton Smith to Gerald Jones. Grice threw a key block on the 10 to move Jones over, and Smith kicked the point. In the third quarter. Lewis hrokc through right tackle, cut back up the middle, and wiggled his way through a maze of Burgaw tacklers for a 76-yard touchdown gallop. Smith was true on the point . kick again. Smith crashed over from the four in the fourth quarter on the end of a 42-yard drive for the final score of the game. Jones. Lewis. Jene Thompson and Smith were the top offensive performers for Warsaw, with Grice. J.D. Davis and Tommy Rogers sparking the defensive play. Jimmy Basden turned in his usual fine offensive game for Burgaw. as did Max Murray. Blue Herring and Lewis Meadows topped the Devils' defensive play. NORTH CAROUNA Farm Hps From Waetiovia Bank ft Trust Co., N.A. ByDr.J.W.Pou A long-held dream of North Carolina's agricul tural leaders is now rapidly coming true. "A balanced agriculture, which for decades has been our goal, is just over the horizon," said Dr. J. E. Legates, dean of the School of Agriculture and Life" Sciences'at North Carolina State University: I He said tobacco is expected to bring Tar Heel I farmers $1 billion last year for the first timfe, although that figure was almost reached in 1976. "But in addition to tobacco, five other commod ities should each add over $200 million to our cash farm receipts. They are broilers, com, pork, eggs and soybeans," the NCSU official said. Legates said beef, forest products, milk and tur keys each should contribute over $100 million to the state's 1978 farm income. In 1950, cash farm income for the state was just over three-quarters of a billion dollars. Of this total, Legates said, only 18 percent came from fajrm sales of animals and animal products. Crop sales accounted for the other 82 percent. In 1977, the total approached $3 billion. Farm sales of animals and animal products comprised | 40.5 percent, and crop sales 59.5 percent. "Tobacco brought in almost twice as many dol lars in 1977 as in 1950, but its proportion of the ; total during this period dropped from 62 percent to only 28 percent, the NCSU dean of agriculture said. He added: "The significance of these figures is obvious. While our income from tobacco has con tinued to grow, we have developed a number of ;? strong alternative farming enterprises to give us a more stable and more balanced agricultural m\ ciAJiiuiiiy. Nationally, North Carolina ranks first in receipts from farm forestry, pickling cucumbers, sweet po ' tatoes, and tobacco; second in turkeys, fourth in broilers and eggs; seventh in swine, but first in the P number of swine producers marketing over 5,000 hogs per year. "Average milk production for our dairy cows on If test is eighth highest in the United States, and tops | in the Southeast," he said. Legates said research at North Carolina State University has been aimed specifically at finding k new crops that can be grown in the state. Examples Kare sunflowers, grapes and Christmas trees. i "But" he said, "we know we can't just grow these I products. We must also have a continuing substan I; tial market for them. For many new products, mar t kets are difficult to develop." Com and soybean production have increased and |i should continue to increase in acreage and yields, 1 the dean said. But, he added, these crops do not I provide per-acre returns that can compare with Ptobacco. However, they do stimulate the state's I poultry and livestock production. "North Carolina must process what it produces," pLegates said. "Giant strides have been made in this b|,direction. The Food Science Department at North I Carolina State was established with this mission. E|lt has worked with other state agencies to make l|a major contribution to our ability to process What The NCSU official said North Carolina has the I soil, ternpe^rature and moisture to grow a^de range Significant quantities of Tar Heel fruits and vege I t b , 1 ?gy t t Hs ^ phhis dour Jam, re fro tobac > badly. the ima time *earcheri extensioi

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