Newspaper Page Text
4-C
. The Summerville News, Thursday, May 8, 1986
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Local Student Wins Scholarship
Kroger r?resentatives Barney Epstein,
right, and Judy Thomas, left, present
SSOO scholarships to students at the
University of Georgia College of Phar
macy. The presentations were made at the
College's annual Scholarship and Grants
Luncheon. The recipients were Walter
Deficiency Payments
Paid To Local Farmers
Chattooga County farmers
who participated in the volun
tary feed grain program last
year received deficiency
payments on their 1985 crops
of corn and sorghum, according
to Hank Hammond, County
ALL-STAR CHAMPIONSHIP
Wrestling
FRIDAY, MAY9-BP.M.
Summerville Junior High Gym
Mid-America Tag Team Championship Match
- THE DIRTY WHITE BOYS
(JIM POWELL AND BILLY STAR)
VS.
THE NEW YORK DOLLS
(CHANCE MYERS AND TIM MAYES)
* WILD TAG BATTLE +
COUSIN TERRY AND BUTCH MANTEL
VS.
GENE SPURLOCK & SAMMY COLLINS
soeeY Tidwell | The Terminator
VS. V.
ROWDY L 1 mmond Johnny Star
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
12-MAN OVER-THE-TOP-ROPE
BATTLE ROYAL
DOORS OPEN AT 7 P.M.
ADMISSION: ADULTS $5.00 - CHILDREN $4.00
MOVIE SPECIALS
FROM STANSELL’S
OVER 2,000 TITLES TO CHOOSE FROM
REG. *2.00
FOR A LIMITED TIME
WE HAVE OVER 1,000
TlTlEs"lllllllllll
CHOOSE FROM !
LARGEST MOVIE SELECTION IN THIS AREA
CENTRALAVE. S & S FURNITURE & APPLIANCE TRION
Eugene Guice, a second-year student from
Ringgold; Kathy Sue Heramb of Resaca,
a second-year student; Richard Glenn
Parks, a second-{ear student from Mur
rayville; and Melanie Dawn Rounsaville
of Summerville, also a second-year
student.
Executive Director of the
Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service.
Deficiency payments make
up the difference between the
established target price and
the higher of either the national
7
| average loan rate for the crop
| or the national average &rice
| received by farmers. ‘“When
| prices fall below target levels,
| deficiency payments are made
| to program participants,” Mr.
' Hammond said.
| Target prices for the 1985
crops were $3.03 per bushel for
corn and $2.88 per bushel for
| sorghum. Nationally, farmers
| received an average price of
$2.24 per bushel for corn and
$1.98 }fer bushel for sorfihum.
| Mr. Hammond said eligible
producers will receive deficien
cy payments at a rate of 48
| cents per bushel for corn and
| 46 cents per bushel for
sorghum. Payments for the
croFs are computed by
multiplying the established
yield for the farm by the
acreage planted for harvest
times the payment rate.
| According to Mr. Ham
' mond, checks have been issued
| this month to all corn and
| sorghum producers in Chat
tooga County who participated
|in the Agency's Acreage
| Reduction Program. ‘‘Some
" producers requested advance
| deficiency paKments when they
| enrolled in the acria;%e reduc
| tion program for feed grains.
| Therefore, final payments to
| those farmers were reduced by
' the amount of advance
f payments already received.”
| Nationally, ASCS will
disburse about $2.6 billion in
deficiency payments for
| 1985-crop corn and sorghum.
[ For additional information
| on deficiency payments, Kro
| ducers may contact the Chat
| tooga County ASCS office.
SHOP CHATTOOGA
COUNTY MERCHANTS
Rep. Darden’s Office Taking
Cutbacks To Help Balance Budget
A combination of ims
mediate austerity measures
and careful planning of future
spendins 18 allowing 7th
District Congressman George
“Buddy” Darden's office to
meet the mandates of the
Gramm-Rudman balanced
budget law without adverselly
affecting service to the people
of northwest Georgia.
“Many bureaucrats within
the federal government are
complaining that Gramm-
Rudman is a catastrophy, that
it will severely hamgoer their
service to the {)ublic, Darden
said. ‘“‘But always have
believed that every federal
agency — including Congress
— could cut spending enough
to balance the budget without
7 v Y |
AR Y
ey PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY MAY 8 THROUGH MONDAY, MAY 12, 1986 | ‘ ‘
S CLOSED FOR
A MOTHER’S DAY SUNDAY, —
HEAVY WESTERN MAY 11, 1986 HEAVY WESTERN
BONELESS 7S I:E?gngl.:s's‘ o BONELESS
CHUCK [, SrRoAsT ) SHOULDER
' 98¢ ROUND ROAST..... %1% 7§l 14
‘ 15\ COOKED HAM.... 5 $149 LB.
WILSON CORN KING T~
—HEAVY WESTERN- | fliy
PR, snco| BONELESS HAM 4 ,{:” ]
Ny T-Bosne Steak.... ’2 $ 54 é
. e aramery BONELESS \
@’ Sirloin Steak ... .= $219 % 18, )
S M1GN0N.........s 5439
_ SRYAN JUICY JUNBOS,__ @ 139 ' SLICED SLAB 99¢
FRANKS ‘= ™ A 'u | 552= BACON. .
meown 9. $ 4 iR |nigLers 3 $
MEDIUM 2»01. Isv By 1
s:fis = ¢ ?fi(‘”k(@ I ggznuufflfl
Mayonnaise 99 B L L AL CI | VAN CANP's
P1T1AR...........0... 50 Caffeine Free Coke, |lg':{.¥ 3$ 1
IJ’"EANUT 1802.9 149 Sprite, Tab, Dr Pepper, fi%zmgaffll
BUTTER... AR Sunkist & Mello Yello WHITE LILY c
GIANT SIZE
theks 579 [N V. LMI Flov: 8
DETERGENT........ il IR
= s~ _ 9 j=>>
825 HINES 2 Ice 0Z:ream............51.79 = Crisco N
H Cake Mix E i‘r“:::’a“'t“i‘iranks........99‘SHOßTEMNG =
H o Hioiers9H snem
b [—] s-oz. TUB - —
=\ ¢£/ Sour Cream.....99° =\ $ 99 /7
D £ e 99¢ D £
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PRODUCE P::ggk AC'éVgPT N:mm-:nu
NEW RED . g /) TOWELS X, T
POTATOLS L e 79> RS 96‘2
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FRESH YELLOW
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P 2 PINT 5100 ~LYERLY
Lo CUPS |
excessively curtailing ser
vices.”
“M{ staff and I are
ogfirat ng under that
P i o:voifihy,” Darden added.
‘We keep all three district
offices (in Marietta, Rome and
LaFayette) open, and we ex
pect to maintain our strong
constituent services to the peo
ple of the 7th District, even as
we help return the nation to a
course of fiscal responsibility.”
The Gramm-Rudman law,
for which Darden voted last
December, sets increasingly
lower limits for federal budget
deficits each year between now
and 1991, when a balanced
budget is re%mred To meet the
SIBO-billion deficit limit for the
current fiscal year, members of
Congress were required to cut
their staff salmfi' budgets by 10
g_ercent and shave 4 percent
om office expenses — all of
this nearly hai,fe way through
the fiscal year whicg began in
October.
“We have not printed a
newsletter so far this year, and
we are working harc{ to hold
other mailing costs to a
minimum,” Darden pointed
out. ‘“Of course, providing a
prompt, complete, written
response to any constituent’s
inquiry or comment remains a
top priority.”
There will be very little
travel by staff members from
now on, Darden said, and he
keeps an eye out for low
Washington-Atlanta air fares
as he shuttles between House
sessions and his duties in the
district. “Traveling tourist
class is nothing new for me;
I've been doing it ever since |
came to Congress'' in 1983, he
added.
So far, Darden said, salary
cuts and layoffs have been
unnecessary.
“We absorbed the 10 J)er
cent cut in the salary budget
by not reglacing two staff
members who left recently,” he
explained. However, he noted,
wafges have been frozen in
definitely for all Congressional
staff members.
“We are being careful to
avoid waste and unnecessar
exépenses," Darden sai({
“Every office supply item
which does not have to be
bought, and every piece of
eqmgment made to last
another year, takes a few more
dollars off the deficit.”
The House of Represen
tatives’ leadershif) also is
tightenings its belt, Darden
said. He noted that the House
no longer meets dpast 7pm. —
halting the need for overtime
pay for support personnel and
security guards.
‘“People who believe the
House is too long-winded in its
debate probably consider that
the dgreatest benefit of Gramm-
Rudman,” Darden joked.