14 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore Mon., Jon. 23, 1961 "V, I- .... tllr (CT!.-it"i--. I vsae-n;-',. . A 4 Further Industrial Slump Sets Immediate Economic Task For Kennedy Regime f i I 1 S 1 NEW YORK (AP) Business decisions and most business ba rometers pointed toward a further industrial slowdown last week pointing up immediate economic problems for the new Kennedy administration. Production cutbacks were or dered in such basic industries as automobiles, oil and copper. The steel industry sharply curtailed plants and equipment in 1961. plants andequipmcnt in 11. These moves are expected to become downward lines on future charts, paralleling similar de clines disclosed for industrial production, personal income and bousing staris in neceinuer. Arthur Goldberg, me incoming labor secretary, estimated the : V OODLES OF NEW RUBLES Moscow vault workers ready sacks of new coins for shipment to exchange centers throughout the Soviet Union as Russian currency change over begins. A new ruble will be handed out for every 10 old ones turned in. Fire Damages Equipment Building At Glendale Ranch By MRS. G. B. FOX Fire gutted the cRg handling room and burned equipment and eggs in the room when fire broke out from an over-heated oil vat at the Lawrence Mullaikey chicken ranch near Glendale. Mullarkcy discovered the fire and with the help of neighbors ex tinguished the blaze before it spread to the nearby chicken house. To Move Bac'- Word lias been received that Mr. and Mrs. Don Young of Glendale now living in Livingstone, Mont., will move back to Glendale soon despite Young's accident. His case has been transferred to a Mcdford doctor. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Blaser of Battle Kock and their daughter. Mrs. Ralph Wood, of Portland, re cently visited menus in iiienciaie. Eldon Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Harris of Glendale, is wearing a neck brace as a result of a recent wrestling accident at the school in which he strained the muscles in hi neck, Noah Anderson of Fortune Rrancli has been released from forest Glen Hospital, C'anyonville. Jake Fisher of Azalea has been released from Forest Glen Hospi tal following treatment for pneu . motua. tie entered the hospital be fore Christmas. Mrs. Stella Smith has returned to Glendale after spending a week with her son-in-law and dnughter, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Albright, in Portland. Roths Return ' Dr. and Mrs. Robert Roth have returned to Glendale atlcr spend ing a week in Los Angeles, Calif., where the former took a post graduate course in endocrinology. Returning home, they visited with friends in California. The Roth chil dren stayed with their grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Rene Roth, in Glendale. While the Rolli's were fionc, Dr. William Weather of Fort Worth, Tex., cared for Roth's patents. current number of unemployed at 5.5 million, up a million from the reported mid-December total. President Kennedy made no economic proposals in his inaug ural address, confining himself to international matters, but his eco nomic task forces previously had urged swift new spending pro grams to combat the business slump. , Outgoing President Eisenhow er, in his final budget and again in his last economic report to the nation, warned against big in creases in government spending. He said the economy was in good shape despite declines in produc tion and employment, which he attributed to liquidation of an over-accumulation of inventories. Auto inventories of over a mil lion units at last report were one factor behind a 10 per cent re-, duction planned in auto produc tion this week. Sales contests for dealers and salesmen, an old in dustry tactic, were whipped up to pep up demand and avoid a repe tition of the disastrous 1968 selling pattern. In similar fashion, Texas au thorites reduced permissible oil production next month to an eight day producing pattern, one day less than in January. Copper producers trimmed their price and also cut output 10 to 15 per cent in a twin effort to get the red metal moving. The American iron and steel in stitute said steelmakers plan to spend $1.2 billion on' new facilities this year, down 19 per cent from 10's $1.48 billion. Last year's spending was 7.S per cent under the 1960 goal. Personal Income Drops Particularly chilling to econo mists was S2.3 billion drop in per sonal .income reported by the Commerce Department for De cember, bringing the seasonlly adjusted annual rate to $406.7 bil lion. Continued heavy spending by consumers has been cited time and again in recent months as a bulwark of the economy. Consumers apparently were un daunted by the figures, however. Department store sales last week were reported by the Federal Re serve Board to be T per cent high er than in the similar 1960 week. Private housing starts in De cember fell to the lowest level in two years, the Census Bureau re ported. It figured the seasonally adjusted annual rate at 999,000 units, down 18 per cent from No vember andi32 per cent from De cember, 1959. Big Banks To Merge Briefly over the business scene Two New York banks. Manu facturers Trust Co. and the Han over Bank, announced plans to merge into the city's third largest bank and the country's fourth largest. . . . Glen Alden Corp., which had offered on Jan. 3 to buy Endicott-Johnson Corp. stock, shifted signals and announced it would sell all stock tendered, plus a sizable block previously re ceived in a stockswap, to the Endicott-Johnson pension fund. . . . The National Board of Fire I'n derwriters estimated 1960 fire losses in the United States at Sl. 107.824,000, a record. ... A. .M. Sonnabend, who resigned as a StudebakerPackard Corp. direc tor when he didn't get the presi dent's job, was named chairman of the Seagrave Corp. . . . The Federal Communications com mision tentatively approved a major test of pay-tv at Hartford, Conn. . . . Peter Hoguet, presi dent of Econometrics Institute Inc., predicted a 41 per cent gain in U.S. industrial production in the next decade. Mr. and Mrs. Curtice Williams and family of Modesto, Calif., have been visiting with Mrs. Williams mother Mrs. John Bone, Glendale. John Goodson of Glendale is in a Roseburg hospital receiving mea-ii-nl treatment. Mr. and Mrs. Donald McKinney of North Bend are the parents of a boy born Jan. 13. Mrs. ilcrunney is the i former Gladys Vincent, daughter of Jack Vincent of Glen dale. Days Creek Man's Stepfather Dies Durnin Swinglcy of Days Creek has received word that his step father, Glenn Angel, recently died at Lewlstown, mano. He was born in New xoric ana was in his early 70's. He has made three visits to Days Creek, reports Mrs. Ralph Martin, correspondent. Reiidenti Return Mrs. George Pike and grandson, Hudson Henry, have returned homo after visiting his brother, Horace Hull, of Pasco, Wash. Recent visitors in the home of (ho Rev. Alice May Woolley were Mrs. Harold Chapman and daugh ter from Talent. Mrs. Fred Seymour Is helping out at the Days Creek Post Office in the absence of Mrs. Lucia Sny der, postmaster, - Mr. and Mrs. Art Laubach Jr., of Baldwin Park, Calif., visited with friends at Days Creek recent ly. Mr. and Mrs. A. V. "Bobo" Mar tin of Packwood, Wash., were re cent visitors in the home of his sister, Mrs. Oneta Hendrix, and in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Meyers. Wayne Oxford has accepted em ployment with the Richfield Oil company near Jan. v-aui. ins wc and daughter will join him in the neur future. &, f J?. .jKaa"."" NAVEL ORANGES " fcV Here's the sweet treat of the winter seoson. The sweetest, xLLJ Le jJ JT juiciest, finest-flavored Navel oranges you ever tasted n sZfini0 are at Safeway right now. We've rushed big shipments of J Vl cJKfj-b thit 90,,en ftu,t direct from 1 1 CfwBfesSSiSCA sunny California orchards 43 00 la I mMxr SWik eiPecia,,y for ,M ia,e- -i"wy vO 3? If I B!,lx;'4 Tree -ripened to natural 11 C- If ft- 1 H 1 1 fjjl - elr luscious goodness! Half Box P ' J I Vr U - P,rml( J Lemons sunki .., 5 , 29c Cauliflower c,my ,. ib. 19c r I n T rwi 1 pi Ik. A Q3G HEM mrut MUM NO VINTINO NO UNT tf NOIMAl OIUCAII OatS Hi all hbun IIIACH 0I1FINII O MLIO NIAT NOT, WAIM. COID WA1II 1IIIC1ION run IOD CPClt (31" rllndr t D1VIN9 CYCUt Hull iiy mud damp 4rf "COMPACMOMIO W.ih.t-Jrytr Costs less than deluxa Automatic Washers , . yours for only $98 And remember it's a m Per Week FAMED FOR DIPINOABIUTY 648-658 S. E. Rose St. 635 S. E. Stephens St. Phone OR 2-1616 Phone OR 2-1616 Home-Owned and Operated WIN A R.C.A. FREEZER FREE 111 wu.HJ Enter the big BEL-AIR contest. Details ot Safeway F.IL0UR Reg. $1.05 Gold Medal "Kitchen-tested" Save on this famous all-purpose flour. Limit Please 10-lb. Bag Lemons sunki iore tie 5 f 29c Grapefruit T., Pik. 5 hf 39c AppleS Wmeiepi, extio-fancy lb. 1 9C Bell Peppers Lo,9 3 Potatoes U.S. No. 1 No. Dakota 10lb,59c din Reg. 69c. All pure vegetable oil. Limit, please Kl.. kiJ mi Why pay HU lYldUC VII More? Waldorf Tissue Cereals KELLOGG'S Corn Flakes, 8-oz Rice Krispies, 5Vi-oi., Cheerios, 7-oz., Wheaties, 8-oz., Quaker Puffed Rice, 4'j-oi. i Ik i Vi 4 39c 5.,$1.00 Play "Cross-Out" for Cash $75,250 in Cash ... FREE Assorted colors and white; for the bathroom. Libby's Corn Wh. Kernel can 21c Two-Ten Milk foS skim 2 Sis 87c S & W Peas crieT!eLc3Q0n3 23c Slenderway '900' fclS? 89c Dole Juice Pineapple cart 29c Pineapple haifces 5 Nt?atl'4 $1 Beef Sausage 3 $1 00 Ground Beef da'ly lb. 49c Pork Spare Ribs Lra,! ,b. 39c Boiling Beef lb 19c Canned Picnics ZsZ: $1.98 Sauerkraut 'p2"fl: 19c Frankfurters DiZ" Ib 39c Stewing Beef ,b. 79c or Grt. Northern. 4-lb, .. pkg. J7t 26-oz. cans twk No. i2 Pinto Beans Town H FricLiae Dog Food II IsKlcS Economy size Nine Lives oS?L.2N2 29c 7 303 rf cans I .0 pkgs. 27c 2 S 35c This is a reprint of GAME No. 1 . . . Look for exciting Game No. 2 in Thursday's Ad 2 5 6 9 10 W Tl SB 29 30 S3V 34-37 42 46 49 ffr1 5J S4 is . "J: 69 70 72 7iW 89 93 94 f?.-l5- mi ii ! yl-f ' . V ighway Tree-ripened . Apple Sauce t IaIIiwaII PlQin or. tapioca Beauty Bar puddings . Scamper, pink, green , It's Fun! It's Free! Nothing to buy. No obligation. A LOCAL contest at Safeway stores in . Oregon and Southwest Washington, only, where you con win fabulous CASH prizes as high at $1000. A completely NEW game in our Ad each Thursday. Get your, free "Cross-Out" card today and every time you visit Safeway. A complete set of rules and instructions will appear in Thursday's paper. EIF TOT PAST Extra Meaty BLADE CUTS "USDA CHOICE" beef . . . scientifically gtd for maximum flavor, tenderness, nd eating pleasure. Close "Safeway trimmed", too. Alcoa Foil HOUSEHOLD 12-INCH 25 ft roll 35' Dry Trend DETERGENT Surf LAUNDRY DETERGENT r,...93c Lux Liquid DETERGENT Scot Napkins White or Ass't Colors 2 pk96Vf 29c Scot Tissue For The Bathroom 2 roh, 25c Beef Chuck Steaks Cross Rib Roast "USDA CHOICE" aged beei "USDA CHOICE" boneleis beef lb. lb. tJ 7 l 79c FOR EXTRA SAVINGS WE GIVE GOLD BOND STAMPS met In thit eaVertiiemtnt ere effective Monday thru Wtdnwd.y, .tan nery 25, et Safeway in Roi.butg end Sutharlin. We reierve the right te limit. 12 ot. tin 39c