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. your maiketplacel

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