usmess By Leroy 10 The Newi-Review, Roseburg, Or. Sat., Feb. II, 1961 Reaume Talks To Managers Of Chamber On Retired Couples Inducement Ads Harold Reaume. secretary-man ager of the Roseburg Chamber of Commerce, was in .Portland won- day and Tuesday attending the Oregon-Washington-Idaho Chamber oE Commerce Managers annual meeting. He spoke before the group on the Roseburg chamber's program of advertising to attract retirement couples and tourists to this city' and Douglaa County. The Rose burg chamber has taken the lead in this form of promotion, he said. He reported considerable interest was shown by chamber managers from other cities in the program. Results from recent advertising in Midwest "blizzard" states has been very gratifying, according to Reaume. To date 185 inquiries have been received from advertisements placed in five farm journals and seven daily newspapers in the Mid west. These journals include Dakota, April Seems To In Government, By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK (AP) April seems to be the magic month in both government and business plan ning. Both hope by then to have an idea how serious is the threat of a general recession. Both agree, at least privately, that it's hard to tell today. Here's why April is the month they're choosing. Many Industries Particularly the heavy goods ones have pret ty well written' off the January-February-March period as a slow one, at best. Most still say they expect the business roadblocks to melt when the snow does. The in creasing army of the unemployed hope they're right but for them the current outlook seems as un stable as the weather. President Kennedy made H plain this week he'll wait until April for another look around to see if business conditions justify the stimulus ot a tax cut that wnuld nut more SDending money in consumer pockets while with holding money from the U.S. Treasury up against a threat of a deficit. Federal lawmakers will study the economic outlook over the next few weeks in hearings do. fnra the Joint Economic Commit tee of Congress. The perennial nrnnosals of tax cuts will be de batedcuts for Individuals to spur spending, tax incentives for busi ness to nudge investing in the new equipment. Both would help the economy but how soon and now eaecuveiy is debatable. Every few days slock traders pop out like groundhogs to look around and decide an upturn in coming months is likely. Some think it will come from business revival on its own initiative. Oth ers scent more inflation in the wind from spending proposals be fore Congress. Current business statistics are mostly as depressing as expected. But there's always the spring. It brings outside jobs. It often perks up car sales. It inspires builders, especially in the colder regions of the nation. It turns con sumer thoughts toward.. Easter finery and spring outfits and sum mery home furnishings. Administration steps already taken to spur the economy and those already asked of Congress seem unlikely to have much ef Liquor Sales Decline SALEM (AP) State liquor sales in January were down 3.58 per cent from the January, 1960 total, the state Liquor Control Commission said Thursday. Sales the last six months of last year were off 1.38 per cent from the similar period of 1959. BEAM ACREAGE WANTED (Blue Lake Beans) Term Contracts Now Being Offered by cash buyer ;' DOLE CORPORATION (formerly Paului Bros. Packing Co.) Call or write JACK COULSON EM 2-4181, Salem, f. 0. lox351 Salem, Oregon S cene Inmin Minnesota, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska Farmers, published in those states, and in daily newspa pers published in Denver, Pueblo, Scotts Bluff. Grand Island, North Platte, Hastings and Salt Lake City. The program, he said, calls for ads in 36 more dames ana lour more farm publications. . When replies are received, each is answered with a letter typed and signed, answering specific ques tions about this area, giving gener al information and including fold ers about Roseburg and the county. Also mailed to these persons are copies of two separate editions of The News-neview. Reaume said that advertising in March will be aimed at the tourist trade, inviting visitors from out of state. Reaume will chairman the Ore gon Managers division fall meeting at The Village Green at Cottage Grove. Be Magic Month Business Plans fect before April those things take time. Many business planners don't like to commit themselves further just now till the outlook is clearer. Earnings statements mostly aren't encouraging with little change ex pected for a while. So they're eyeing April. But meantime urging their sales force try hard in the next eight weeks lust in case. Gus Reynolds Takes Over Former Hicks' Realty Business - Gus Reynolds has taken over the real estate office of the late El mer Hicks at 806 SE Cass Ave. and has renamed the business Rey nolds Realty. Mrs. Hicks is continuing the El mer Hicks Insurance Agency in ine same location. nvjiiuiuaj avi mew ui icai es tate with Joe Quant here for sev eral years, left and purchased a motel in Utah, then after a couple ot years sold out and returned to Roseburg. He has been associat ed with Jim Bcvans Real Estate until recently. Associated with Reynolds in the ornce are lm uassett, who has been in real estate work for five years, first with Lee Jones,' then with L. P. MCAneney and Hicks. He continued with Hicks until the letter's death. Doc Pocock is with the firm on a part-time basis. Bettv Poetter has joined the office force com ing here from Portland, and Elton Zuver is also new with the busi ness, having started to work for Hicks recently. Bank Debits For Three Counties Show Decrease Bank debits for the west central Oregon area, including Douglas, Lane and Coos counties, decreased by 5.5 per cent in December 1960 compared with that of November, according to figures compiled by the University of Oregon Bureau of Businoss Research. Debits for December totaled $199,114,576; for November $210, 745,165 and for December 1959 the total amounted to $235,751,224. Oregon with 216 banks reporting, had an increase in bank debits in December 1960 of 2.4 per cent com pared with November and a de crease of 3.1 per cent over Decem ber 1959. Total debits for Oregon in December cams to $2,172,062, 187; November 1960 totaled $2,121, 808; and December a year ago, it reached $2,241,494,477. Chris Shaffer Outlet, Adds Chris Shaffer is expanding h i s candy business and Friday open ed a retail - outlet in connection with his eandv-making faculties. Name of the business is El Rancho Home Made Candies. The business is located in the former Dale's Cafe building on NE Diamond Lake Blvd. just east of tne new Dale s cate. Shaffer has. been producing can dy in Roseburg for several years, and has built up a wholesale out let throughout Oregon and north ern uaulornia. However, ne naa MAX CLARK , . , assistant manager Max Clark Arrives As Ward Assistant Manager Of Store Max Clark is the new assistant manager of the Montgomery Ward & Co. store in Roseburg. He ar rived here this week to replace Lynn Hall. Clark and Hall have exchanged positions. Clark comes here from an assistant managership at Red wood City, Calif., and Hall has left for Redwood City, after an approximate 20 month stay in Roseburg. Clark has been an employe of Ward's for eight years, beginning part time while a student at Chico State College, then joining the firm full time upon graduation. He went from there to Stockton, where he took a management training course with the store, then was transferred to Berkeley, then to JJurlingame and Redwood City. Clark has a wife, Clyda, and daughters, Kathy, 4, and Linda, 15 months. He is a native of Ches ter, Calif. Barbers, Beauticians Oppose Race Measure SALEM fAP) Officials of AFL-CIO barbers and beauticians unions protested Thursday against a bill to bar racial dis crimination in firms selling per sonal services. The Senate Stale and Federal Affairs Committee heard testi mony that most Oregon barber and beauty shops will not serve Negroes. The bill would extend the pres ent discrimination law which af fects hotels, motels and reslau rants. The committee was told that the measure is supported by church and other groups seeking to get full rights lor minority grouiis. Thomas J. Baker, secretary of the Portland Barbers Union, said he never has cut a Negro's hair. and that most barbers don t know how. Both Baker and George Line- han. reDresenting the Barbers said the bill discriminates against their right to refuse service. They said it is a social, not a legisla tive, question. Bergeron Is Attending Meet Of Niagara Corp. Cyril Bergeron of Niagara of Roseburft, 627 SE Stephens St., is attending a two-day meeting for distributors of the Niagara Thcr- py Corp., Friday and today in San Francisco. The company was scheduled to reveal Us new marketing policies, latest findings in its medical re search program and promotional plans for 1961. Niagara manufac tures relaxation equipment for use at home, in the office and on the road. KICnMANKTS LAWYER Robert Scrvatius, above, de fense counsel for Nari Adolf Eichmann, has received a bill of charges against his client from the authorities in Jeru salem. Eichmann is charged iwlth 15 counts ot crime against humanity . and the Jewish, people. J IS , ' r ( . L ' f!um Expands Candy Retail Store only limited facilities in his former location. He moved into the former Dale's Cafe about the first of the year, then decided to put in a retail out let featuring home made candies. Shaffer said his specialties are peanut and cocoanut brittle and cocoanut marshmallows. These he will continue to sell wholesale. For his retail business he will add several other types of candy, including novelties such as Valen tine candy and candies lor par ties. Shaffer has been in the candy making business for 40 vears he said, starting in Milwaukee, Wis. Then he moved to California and operated a candy shop in North Hollywood for 18 years. He moved to KoseDurg seven years ago. He moved in equipment he used formerly and has added other nec essary items and has remodeled the quarters for Ins new needs. Johnson Manager Of Shell Station At Shopping Center Al Johnson is the manager of the newly opened Shell Service Station, located at the west en trance to the Drive 'n' Save super market. The station, to be known as Al's Shell Service, is one of three new ones constructed in Roseburg in the past year. A fourth is now being rebuilt on W. Harvard Ave. Johnson and his wife came to this area last fall, when Mrs. John son accepted a teaching position in the Oakland school. They have four children and are currently re siding in Oakland. The Johnsons came from Hunt ington in eastern Oregon,, where they had resided six years. They are formerly from the Midwest. The station was completed early this year but the opening was de layed. It is the latest style sta tion incorporating most modern features. It has a single gas pump bay now with provision for another later on. Other new stations are the re built John Robertson Shell Service, Tom Havens Shell Service, both on SB Stephens St. and being rsmod eled is the Jarvis Robertson Shell Service on W. Harvard. Roland West Visits Here From Nevada Roland West, former local busi ness man, was in Roseburg this week from Henderson, Nev., where he recently opened a jewelry store. He visited his son, Les West, manager of Roseburg Jewelers; a daughter. Mrs. Mike Coen: h 1 s brother. Jack West, and then went to Eugene to visit another son, who is attending the University of Ore gon. He said Henderson is a city of 12,000 now and growing rapidly. Along with growth of the city, however, is growth' of gambling nouses, which have nearly dou bled since tie went there. Henderson sort of gets the over flow from near by Las Vegas, and also from the Rambling-free Boul der City. There are many miners around the area, he said. Gambling, the lifeblood of Ne vada, however, has its problems, said West. It is a standing rule that businessmen and their em ployes do not gamble. The risk is too great. He said it is often dif ficult to find help that will not gamble. Organizations have been set up similar to AlcohoUcs Anony mous to try to break gambling addicts of their craving for the activity. West said he does like Nevada and has enjoyed good business since going there. Minnie South Winner Of Organ In Contest Minnie L. South, 1206 SE Mill St., Roseburg, is a third prize win ner in the recently concluded na tional Raisin Bread Toast-to-Trav-cl Sweepstakes contest, the Cali fornia Raisin Advisory Board an- nuuncea nure. inn prut is a con cert electric organ. The contest, open to consumers of raisin bread and supported in each community by local bakers. offered a top prize of 10-day va cation trips abroad for four per sons for the next five years. Sec ond prize was a Studebaker Lark sedan. Luce To Assume Bonneville Post PORTLAND (AP) Charles F. Luce, who has been named the new Bonneville power administra tor, will take his oath of office here Tuesday. U. S. District Judge Gus J. Solo mon will administer the oath. Luce, a Walla Walla attorney. was appointed to the job by Sec retary of Interior Udali to replace William A. fearl. Luce has scheduled a news con ference after the ceremony. Tax Litn Hits Eitat LOS ANGELES (API The In ternal Revenue Service has filed an income tax hen for $22,820 against the estate of the tenor Ma rio Lanza and (his wife Betty. Tax agents said this amount was due for back income levies for 1955-56-S7. The singer died Oct. 7, 1959. and his wife died five months later. Real Estaf Business Cat Bowles has moved his real estate office in Oakland from the Thomas Hotel to the Jack Sifers building on Icust St.. reports Edith Dunn, Oakland correspondent. . , ,""j?t - .... V' , ' , -o 4 Irfr i IiIimmiiii 'iii m lNTii llr i Ml imiiifc imii i whiiiiiw mum w i - in"iiir i in t ' ", ,m , ,u BUSINESS AND' CIVIC LEADERS of Roseburg and top officials of Montgomery- Ward & Co. and its building contractor Hilp and Rhodes were on hond Wednesday for ground breaking ceremonies of Ward's new depart ment store. Ed C. Nolte, manager of the local store, ID C. NOLTE, center, receives from Theodore Rhodes, on right, a minature gold shovel symbolizing grouhd breaking for the new Montgomery Ward Department store to be built in Roseburg this spring and summer. Elden E. Peterson, Wards' western region general man ager, looks on at left. (Chris' Studio) Little Change Seen This Week In Retail Prices On Foodstuffs By MARTHA A. POOLTON Consumer Marketing Agent Written for The Associated Press This week consumers will find there is generally little change in the retail price level for produce, meat, eggs and poultry in North west markets.' Supplies of fresh vegetables and fruit are a little heavier. Lettuce of the iceberg head type is arriving in good quantity despite the strike in the producing area. The quality is good and the price is attractive, making lettuce one of your best buys in the vegetable list. Cabbage is reasonably priced along with winter squash of the Hubbard ' variety. Potatoes are a Bond value, too. but there is a wide range in potato prices which makes it important to cnecK qual ity with price when you buy. Al though still a good buy, prices of dry onions are tending upward at thn nresent time. The price level for cauliflower indicates that it Oakland Barber, Beauty Shops Are Being Moved Mr. and Mrs. Norris Williams will move this weekend into their new shop. They will be open for business Tuesday in the former Jewel Theatre building. The building owned by Jesse Lee, has been completely remodel ed inside, with partitions, new floor tile, new plumbing, wiring, new windows and doors. Williams operates the Oakland Barber Shop and Mrs. Williams will operate a beauty shop in the adjoining rooms, according to Edith Dunn, Oakland Correspond ent for The News-Review. DEFENSE POST Arthur Syl vester, chief Washington cor respondent of the Newark, N. J., News since 1944, has been named by President-elect Ken nedy to be assistant secretary of defense for public affairs. (AP Wirephoto) GUEST CALLER SLATED Ruth Stillion of Areata. Calif., will be guest caller Saturday at 9 p.m. at the Buckeroos Square Dance Club's Valentine dance. The event will be held at the Buckeroo Barn. All dancers are invited. may be a fairly good buy for consumers. In the moderate group we have broccoli, Brussel sprouts, par snips, turnips, and rutabagas. Celery is of good quality: how ever, it is in a little lighter supply as a result of some rain in the producing areas. There is a good supply of all types of greens in cluding turnip, mustard and col lards. Romaine, leaf lettuce and endive are moderately priced as are green onions, radishes, green pep pers and spinacn. Tomatoes nave gone up a little this week with supplies short. In fruits, you will see specials on Rome Beauty apples, which are one of the favorite varities for baking. Other fruits in the best buy group are bananas, lemons and grapefruit. Quality in grapefruit is very good now and smaller sizes will generally be most at tractively priced. Moderate buys in fruits include Winesap and Delicious apples. The supply of avocados is increas ing and there may be some spe cials on smaller sizes. Emperor and Almira grapes are available at moderate prices. While some stores may feature oranges at ten cents per pound in line with specials of a few weeks ago, most oranges are selling at higher prices in the moderate category. The meat departments will offer similar values to last week, ac cording to reports received by the Consumer Marketing Office of Washington State University. Prices are very much the same on the whole; however, fresh pork has gone down a little and it will be a good buy. Pork legs average about the same in cost as eco nomical beef roasts this week. Beef cuts such as round steak are being featured by some stores. Lamb, veal and poultry remain steady." Eggs are still in plentiful supply and the large size are a very good buy. , , , Fresh fish this week includes red snapper, sole and cod. Niagara Power Project Delivers Initial Surge NIAGARA FALLS, NY. (AP) The Niagara power project, the free world's mightiest hydroelec tric development, delivers its first surge of power todsy. An official ceremony marked the end of three years of furious work to meet a completion dead line. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller throws a switch to send a flow of power from the first of 25 gene rators into homes and industrial plants. Some 10,000 engineers and work men of the State Power Author iiv completed the S740-million project, which will have a rated capacity of 2,190,000 kilowatts. To day's flow is about 130.000. Available Now A NEW HOMI IN QUINTUS PARK SUB-DIVISION IN WEST ROSEBURG Ivan P. Edwards Builder-Developer OR 3-7493 holds the shovel for the first turning of earth os others gather round for this historical event in the company's history in Roseburg. The 5-acre site for the 65,000 square-foot building is NE Stephens Street ot Garden , Valley Blvd. (Chris' Studio). Ground-Breaking Ceremony For Ward's Store Recalls Interesting Background "This is the happiest day in my life," said Ed C. Nolte, manager of Montgomery Ward & Co. s Hose burg store at a luncheon in the Hotel Umpqua following ground breaking ceremonies lor the com pany's new department store Wed nesday. The ceremonies were held at the NE Stephens St. - Garden Valley Blvd. junction site of the huge new store, which will be located on a five-acre tract. It will have 65,000 square feet of floor space and parking for 450 cars. Nolte was introduced by Frank Schmitt, western region operating manager, who traced briefly his history with the company. Begin ning at Nampa, Idaho, 32 years ago, Nolte was transferred to sev eral stores in the Midwest and then to Huntington Park Calif., and back to Nampa. He came to Rose burg 16 years ago., and has been active in civic affairs here since. He is married and has three sons. Preferred Roteburg Nolte said when he got to Rose burg he told his bosses this is it, that he didn't want to keen on being transferred, even if it meant loss of a promotion. Elden E. Peterson, Ward's west ern region nianager, announced Nolte would manage the new store, a decision not previously made public. Nolte was then presented a miniature gold snovei symoonz ing ground-breaking ceremonies by Theodore Rhodes, secretary and vice president of Hup and Rhodes. Rhodes, speaking at the lunch- New Gimmick To Draw Attention To Roseburg One of the newest gimmicks to attract attention to Roseburg is a "useful" memento which will be given to each woman attending a convention in Roseburg this com ing year. These mementos are 6 by 12 inch pieces of plywood, clear on one side, and useful as a cutting board. They are cut from plywood produced in local plants. An emblem showing a small Douglas Fir tree and the words Roseburg Oregon are stamped on the underside of the board with a "branding iron," according to Har old Reaume, Secretary Manager of the Roseburg Chamber of Com merce, which is making the boards available. Dentist Bill Introduced SALEM (AP) A bill to pre vent dentists from advertising was Introduced Thursday by the Senate Health and Welfare Com mittee, i Similar bills have been intro duced in past sessions, but died in committee. It is supported by the Oregon Dental Association. -MEMO- Food For Thought When you said Be my Valentine Did you also ask her OUT TO Four Winds w Highway 99 s DINE IN AN ATMOSPHERE OF SPACIOUS REFINEMENT eon meeting, brought out an in teresting account to emphasize that his real estate and contract ing firm is not new to Roseburg. His wife, he stressed, is presi dent of the firm. Her grandfather came to Roseburg 100 years ago and worked for Sol Abrams who operated a store on the very site of the new Ward's store. His name was Hyman Wollen berg, who came to Roseburg in the spring of 1860. Mrs. Rhodes has two aunts in Roseburg, Mabel Lewis and Natalie Baum. Hilp and Rhodes will own the building, which will be leased to Wards. Rhodes stated that never before has he felt the sentiment in starting a new construction as he had at the ground breaking ceremonies Wednesday morning, because it was like coming home to Roseburg. Real Estate Class Slated Thursday Harry H. Byrcr, of Coquille, manager, Title Guaranty & Ab stract Co., will be the lecturer fbr the third class of the certificate education course conducted for real estate brokers and salesmen of Douglas County. Topic for discussion will be "Care in Transfers of Interests in Real Property." The class, spon sored without charge by the Ore gon real estate department and the University of Oregon, will be held at Roseburg High School on Thursday, Feb. 16, beginning at 7:30 p.m.. Robert Beardsley, secretary, Douglas County Title., will assist in the lecture. Byrer. who re ceived degrees in political sci ence and law at the University of West Virginia, served for some time as a special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Before accepting his present posi tion he was land administrator for U.S. Plywood Corp., at Gold Beach. Auto Production Listed At 11 5,755 Fori Week DETROIT U. S. motor vehicle production last week totaled 115. 755 units, the Automobile Manu facturers Association reports. The week's output included 96. 298 passenger cars and 19.457 trucks and motor coaches. During the previous week 94,238 cars and 17.997 trucks and buses were pro duced, the AMA said. Cumulative output for 1961 through Jan. 28 totaled, 449.368 units, including 375,498 passenger cars. 73,605 trucks and 265 motor coaches. In the same period last year, 811.487 vehicles were pro duced 688,770 passenger cars, 122, 332 trucks and 385 buses. i DINE? N Restaurant Sutherlin Exit