Tl. .i. 23, 1961 The Newi-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3 Tn plus SILVER DOLLAR TRADING STAMPS i rv n n r n mivhd a r p i 7T777rr7777r7T777l 1 1 11 1 1 II JAM II 11 f,W HL miWU Jg, 'fed M rKANVAJ-AMtKILAN I UUb rUUU ' PA iHMT : 1 New from Pillsbury A I J 11 1 J 111 Mill H IV CUSTOMER SERVICES AT BYRD'S MARKET FLOOR POLISHER RENTAL POSTAGE STAMPS BANK MONEY ORDERS SHOE REPAIR 7 ,01. pkg,. -4 Fishermen SCALLOPS Mb. pkg. Booth "7ft C SHRIMP li CHUBBY No. 1 Tins 15100 12-oz. Bottle 303 Can BYRD'S LEACIH1 Gentle for all clothes GALLON 3? 303 Can 303 Can 13 CATSUP CREAM CORN GARDEN PEAS TOMATOES 303 Can 303 Can No. 2'2 Can APPLESAUCE W.K. CORN GREEN BEANS SAUERKRAUT 4-or. bar BAKER'S German Chocolate 26-oz. Plain or Iodized Leslie Salt 4-or. tin Schilling's Black Pepper 25' 12' 39' YOUR CHOICE Cubed, Colored Byrd's Margarine Unemployment Sees No Ease NEW YORK (AP)-Spring in mellins: winter' snowbanks but nut the drift of unemployment. And Mime think the problem will still be with us when next winter piles up snow again. Even those who feel the most certain thai sprin;; also is inciting the recession and that better days are coining concede that a moder ate pickup in business activity won't bring a comparable in crease in employment. That is because many firms can handle more business with the staff-they now hire without in creasing the work week. Still more can boost production con siderably merely by lengthening the work week of those now em ployed rather than hiring more workers. One of the first sure signs that the business downturn has been reversed- will be the lengthening of the factor work week, now be low the 40-hour standard. The length of f'e standard work week itself will be the subject of more debate as the year wears on, especially if unemployment doesn't fall much from its pres ent level of around 7 per cent of the working force. Some union leaders sav that only a 35-hour work week can cure the unemployment in their industries. They say that automa tion and changes in working meth ods have made it possible, to turn out much more than the old size stalls did. Hence, they argue, the working time now needed must be spread out. President Kennedy has thrown cold water on this goal. He holds that the solution is to increase the total of economic growth. That is, to keep the labor force work ing full time, producing more goods and services for consumers who arc more willing and able to buy. The unemployment problem tends to break down into two phases, the short-term and long term. Those who are laid off for short term reasons that is, because the recession has meant less activity in their industries look for aid from two sources. First is gov ernment aid in more jobless bene fits and in quick pump priming measures. Second is the reversal of the recession itself. Many see signs of this already. Stock market bulls are counted upon to spread contagious cheer among consumers and business men. Both are expected to spend more as paper profits mount in Wall Street. And business spending is ex pected to increase as a natural reaction to having been cut back so far perhaps too far. All of this would mean more activity and longer work weeks and some recalling of laid-off em ployes, i But the long-run problem will rpnmin ' Langendorf Swedish Health Bread Loaf 5'i-oi. pkg. Borden's Whipped Inst. Potatoes 489' 39c 389' altera mm fW7 Pillsbury fir 71 ) All Regular Mixes fill II Your Choice of UUUUiU Flavors REG. 39c orhenun Contains No Km Animal Fa,s J'J or Meat V BYRD'S OWN All Vegetable 3-lb. Tin iSOUICk Betty Crocker's 12-in-l mix 40-oz. pkg. 33 Crisco Shortening pure an vegetable 3 ib .69 Firechsef Hatches . 6 box crton 49c TOmiilO JUICe Campbell s 46-oz. tin 41.00 Qll)E6r 03fS Quick or Regular . . . 42-oz. Tube 39 Snow White Heads LOCALLY GROWN CAULIFLOWER mw m m mm? mm m m am mar m m mmm m m :PS WU. S. NO. 1 POTATOES ' VJ O M A If CI ADA MCC 10 lb. bag 49C . 5-!b. ba3 59C 15 - .V Omtmit?. GRAPEFRUIT Indian River fancy Ige. size 325c SNOBOY CARROTS 21,H23C Product Price Good Thru Saturday Only MEDO-LAND ICE CREAM HALF GAL. FREE MEDO-LANP ICE CREAM SUNDAE With KRAFT TOPPINGS SATURDAY KRAFT ICECREAM TOPPING All Varieties Your Choice n.ny.,.,.,,-. ..-'TT'1 1 1-1 1 ll, .LIW . III , Vju.'. :l m till Tk.Sljrl-lT- W rilVlll.lk. S',...-- 930 W. HARVARD JUST WEST OF COMMUNITY HOSPITAL I" (-" pfi-'rt in tj.t idvrtiirfirt n 'f.t Mi tifa Sundif. Martti . tftt and product pric tooi thfi SJltflif only. Wl ii-ri tn tttt tA hrrit. h MM to 4'Ht'i. (vcy ilfm io k.tti Ovr Hncondilional luifintit ! llttlfKtiOfl. Kennedy Movie Hollywood Plan By BOB THOMAS AP Movi-TV Wrhtr HOLLYWOOD (AP) Holly wood is getting with the Ken nedy's, too. Over at Warner Bros, they're plotting "PT Boat 109." which j would concern the naval exploits or rresiaent Kennedy during World War Jf in the Pacific. At 20th Century-Fox, Jerry Wald is whipping up a film based on Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy's best selling book, "The Enemy With in." The attorney general's book was a nonfiction account of his experi ences as chief counsel of the Sen ate Select Committee to Investi gate Improper Activities in Labor Management Relations. As every newspaper reader knows, the chief target of the committee's investigation was the Teamsters Union and its president, James R. lloffa. So how ts Wald going lo make a movie out of that? "People are already asking me why I'm making 'that anlilabor picture," the producer com plained. "It isn't going to be an antilahor picture, any more than it will be an anlimanagcment pic ture. "Naturally we will have to fic lionize to put it in motion picture form. The way I see the story is this: There will be two main fig ures, one a young worker who is ; trying to do his job and who wants a Doner union, Dut can t filit the corrupt bosses; the oth er a young guy, a 30-year-old lawyer who is investigating cor ruption. They tfain up lo expose the crooks in the union. "We won't name Bobby Ken nrdy, but we may use some de vice such as the one in 'Boomer ang.' That was a true story about Homer Cummings when he was a crusading prosecutor. At the end of the picture there was a note that said the hero of the story had become attorney general ot the United States." Wald said he would follow the same technique of "On the Wa terfront," a fiction story based on articles about dock union corrup tion. In fact, he has engaged the author ot the screen play, Budd Schulberg, to write "Tho Enemy Within." ' REMOVES RUST ... STAINS tnm UIHTUTS W$ ffMsskorrarais Till FlOOHS 'HET 1IITA SHHBCM mm llllllmiii. niuminwm noui WINDOWS 11 -mm. Ml mm fey ''jLvM mmmkm W..i. o. FiKUWUMtWJRSfT