Harris feefer
Harris-Teeter, Where Our Customers
Are Just As Special As Our Prices
And Our Prices
A^ Very Special
Wednesday, May 6, 1981 Page 7-B
U.S.D.A. Choice Whole “Untrimmed” Beef For Your Freezer
Cut Up And Counter-Wrapped FREE!
Whole Beef Whole Bottom &
Eye-O-Round
Approx.
12 Lbs.
Lb.
You Receive Round Tip Steaks Or Roast &
Trimmings
Approx.
25 Lbs.
, . ■ Save 50c
Lb. ■ Per Lb.
You Receive Rump Roast, Bottom Round
Roast Or Steaks, Eye-O-Round Steaks Or
Roast And Trimmings
Wilson’s
Certified
Tender Made
Ham
$A99
Lb. m. M
Can
Grade “A” Fresh
Holiy Farms
Fryer
Drumsticks
Lb.
Freshiy Frozen
Turkey
Drumsticks
Approx. 6 Lbs.
(Hockless Or Sliced Lb. 69c)
Fresh Pork
Roast
59'
in The Dairy Case
Sealtest
Orange Juice
64 Oz.
Ctn.
H-T
Sliced
Bacon
12 Oz. Pkg. 99c
Chocolate Chip or Sugar
Pillsbury
Cookies
16 02.
Single Wrap
Borden
Cheese
Food
12 Oz.
Pkg.
Frozen Florida
Minute Maid
Orange Juice
16 Oz.
All Flavors
Vernedale
Ice Cream
Gallon
All Varieties
Banquet
Meat
Pies
Chiquita
Golden Ripe
Bananas
Red Ripe
California
Strawberries
pt.
Washington
State
Anjou
Pears
1109
Tangy Fresh
Sunkist
Lemons
1299
For Mother’s Day
Double
Orchid or
Carnation
Corsages
$049
Ea.
Multi-Colored
Mums 6a. M®®
Post
Toasties
Corn Flakes
18 Oz.
Box
Long Grain
Uncle Ben’s
Converted
Rice
3 Lb.
Box
20c OFF
J 0 ii soiossniK ^
(risco
Vegetable Shortening
Crisco
3 Lb.
Can
Green Goddess,
Viva Italian Or
Creamy Bacon
Seven
Seas
Dressing
16 Oz.^
Btl.
White, Pink, Green,
Yellow Or Blue
Charmin
Bath
Tissue
Pk.
Granulated
Kingston
Sugar
9
Kingston
Catsup
Bag
32 Oz.
Btl.
15c OFF
Texize
Fluff
Rinse
Gal.
Plain Or Self-Rising
Red
Band
Flour
5 Lb.
Bag
2 Ltr. Non-Return. Sprite,
Tab, Mello Yello,
Dr. Pepper,
Coca-Cola
_ia
2 Ltr.
Btl.
Prices In This Ad Effective Through Sunday. May 10. 1981 In Aberdeen Harris-Teeter Store Only
e eserve e we Gladly Redeem Federal Food Stamps
Sandhills Blvd. and Hwy. 15-501 - Center Park Shopping Center, Aberdeen, N.C.
Jobless
Program
Beneficial
North Carolina ranks eighth in
the nation in the number of hard
core unemployed who have been
hired under a special elective
income tax credit program
which is scheduled to end Dec.
31,1981.
The special progam, the
Targeted Jobs Tax Credit
(TJTC) program, was enacted in
1978 by Congress as a means to
increase employment in the
private sector, particularly for
the disadvantaged. The Reagan
Administration is urging
Congress not to extend the
program past its current
expiration date of Dec. 31.
Between June, 1979, when
TJTC was implemented and the
end of the first quarter of 1981,
20.229 Tar Heels, who are often
considered the
“unemployables,” had been
employed under the tax credit
program. It is estimated by the
state Employment Security
Commission (ESC), which
administers the program, that
34.229 jobless people will have
been hired under TJTC by the
end of the year.
The targeted unemployed
groups the program is designed
to help include economically
disadvantaged youths, Vietnam
veterans, and ex-convicts;
recipients of Supplemental
Security Income and general
welfare assistance; handicapped
individuals in vocational
rehabilitation programs; and
youths aged 16 to 19
participating in cooperative
education programs.
The TJTC, which may be
taken in ekch of the initial two
years of the worker’s
employment, is 50 percent of
first-year wages up to $6,000
($3,000) and 25 percent of
second-year wages up to $6,000
($1,500)
The Reagan Administration
contends that TJTC has not
opened up a significant number
of new job opportunities in the
private sector for individuals
from the seven target groups.
But ESC Chairman J.B.
Archer says the tax credit
program has given thousands of
persons, otherwise, who would
not have been hired, a fair shake
at the job market.
“Our employes are saying that
TJTC is opening doors with
employers that have never been
opened before,” Archer said.
“When we had 187,700 people
unemployed in the state in
March and we expect that
number to grow during the
coming months, we are going to
need to offer our unemployed as
many new job opportunities in
the private sector as possible,”
Archer said. “I believe TJTC
has been a very successful
incentive to private employers in
North Carolina to hire persons
from these target groups and I
hope that Congress wiU extend
the tax credit program next
year.”
Dental Care
Said Bargain
How much are we paying the
dentist?
A lot, some Americans would
say. Two recently released
government studies show that
it’s a bargain compared with
visiting a physician or going to a
hospital.
The Health Care Financing
Administration of the Health and
Human Services Department
reports that the average
American spends $60 a year for
dental care. By contrast, his tab
for hospital care is $379 and $180
goes for physician’s services.
That’s the average for
everyone. About 53 percent of the
work force actually goes to the
dentist in a year’s time,
according to the National Center
for Health Statistics. Most of us*
visit the dentist twice a year,
with professional and technical
workers going slightly more
often. Even the unemployed go
for 1.8 dental checkups a_year.
Persons with incomes over
$10,000 tend to spend more'out of
pocket for dental care. About one
dollar in four for dental care is
paid by insurance or other types
of coverage,
Orthodontic insurance is one of
the nation’s best health care
buys, according to Dr. Russell K.
Street, uii Anderson, S.C. dental
specialist, who presided over the
annual meeting here of the
Southern Carolina Orthodontic
Association.
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