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Curio shops as well as bars cater to free-spending Ameri
cans in and out of uniform.
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FAT —
Available to you without a
tor’ prescription, our produc'
called Odrinex. You must
ugly fat or your money hack
Odrinex is a tiny tablet
easily swallowed. Get rid of
cess fat and live longer. Odri
nex costs $3.00 and is sold
this guarantee: If not
for any reason, just return
package to your druggist and
your full money back. No
tions asked. Odrinex is sold
tPharmacy—411 guarantee by: N e e 1’
E. Solomon
Orders Filled.
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Low Jobless Rate
Where Do We
Go From Here
EDITOR’S NOTE: The
tion’g unemployment rate is
its lowesst point in nine years,
but the debate over its
economic consequences is grow
every day. In this dispatch,
UPI correspondent John Pier
son outlines the pros and cons
of the question,
By JOHN PIERSON
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI) —The
nation’s ste°'’"y declining Job
^ ess ra * ;e bas touched off a
ma i° r debate over economic
Policy. Basically, the question
is: Where does the United
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Water skiing has made its appearance at recreation
beaches opened up for U.S. personnel.
States go from here—-and how
fast?
Spokesmen for business and
labor d’ffer sharply over
whether the government should
try to push the jobless rate
down below 4 per cent, the
nine-year low the Labor Depart
ment reported for January.
Nat v '-:iiel Goldfinger, director
of research for the AFL-CIO,
said today the government
should now try to get the rate
down to 3 per cent “as rapidly
as possible.”
Madden Disagrees
But Carl H. Madden, director
of economic research for the
working, except for those who
finding jobs for the first time
or changing Jobs and a few
unemployable people, Wirtz
said.
Set Interim Goal
Five years ago, in the early
days of te" Kennedy administra
tion, the President’s Council of
Economic Advisers set as an
“interim” goal a 4 per cent
unemployment rate, s
and said
the figure should be even lower.
But in its economic report to
Congress last month the council
shied away from setting a new
target even though the old one
had been reached.
The ccncil admitted that 4
per cent unemployment does
not mean every American
willing and able t 0 work has a
job. But rather than set a new
goal it called for “steady
progress, at a rate which
permits the economy to adapt
to decreas 1 "T unemployment
r2a t e s . . . while preserving
the reasonable cost and price
stability • hich is necessary for
sustainable progress.”
In other words, with the
economy now operating closer
to capacity than at poy other
time in recent years, the
Johnson administration believes
more Jobs should not be
purchased with inflation.
koote CANADA
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Kalispell
.LIBBY Great
Falls •
MONTANA
Helena
Butte
IDAHO
MILES
0 100
DAM GO-AHEAD — Agree*
ment between the U.S. '
ana
Canadian governments
clears the way for construc
tion of a $325 million dam
on the Kootenai River at
Libby, Mont. Canadian ap
proval was necessary since
the dam’s backup waters
i will extend across the bor
der lumbia. deep into British Co
!
Viet Nam: The U.S. Mark
exuberant U.S. Marines at left going all out to fraternize with two attrac
tive cydfcts are very much a part of today's Saigon scene, where there's plenty
of action and not all of it to do with the war effort. Once the Paris of the East,
a city of tree-shaded boulevards, fine restaurants and inviting, sidewalk cafes,
the South Vietnamese capital is coming to look more and more like an oriental
Las Vegas.. With the rapid build-up of U.S. forces have come American ways,
and the hamburger stand, the pizza palace and the clip joint are taking over.
Other once tranquil cities and towns also are changing, becoming brassy, busy
boomtowns as the massive American presence is felt not only on the battlefields
but behind the lines as well.
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Taste of what's to come. Television is being introduced
under U.S.-South Vietnamese agreement.
U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
disagrees. He says the country
is in for labor shortages and
inflation when the rate drops
below 4 per cent. Some
inflationary bottlenecks already
are occurring, he told UPI
today.
Labor Secretary W. Willard
Wirtz predicts that unemploy
ment will continue falling to 3.5
per cent or less by the end of
1966. Wirtz told a congressional
committee Tuesday the nation
should give top priority to
pushing the rate down even
further, to between 2 and3per
cent.
At that point, everyone who
wanted to work would be
Thursday, Feb. 10, 1966 Griffin Daily Nowo
A Time for Backbone
by Mrs. Muriel Lawrence, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
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Lawrence
he asks for. What he wants is to know how much power he
has to make you give it to him.
In children, as in grownups who’ve been allowed to domi
nate us, there is always a underlying suspicion of their power
to control us. It’s this suspicion that not only makes them so
stubbornly insistent but deafens them to all our excusing
explanations of why we can’t give them what they want.
Thus, if we tell a dominating mother-in-law that we can’t
come to dinner because a garage is overhauling the car, she
promptly says, “Then we’ll come by and get you.” In the
same way a dominating little son will say, “I want THIS can
dy,” in response to our explanation that he has candy at
home.
Neither our mother-in-law nor our little boy has really
heard our excusing explanations, being too concentrated on
testing their power to get submission from us to be able to
hear them. It’s never that they are so hungry for the candy
or our dinner companionship. What they’re hungry for is the
knowledge of whether their wants are still so powerful that
they can sweep our opposing wants out of existence.
They suffer, you see, from an insatiable need to prove
that the control they’ve been allowed to accumulate is still
in effective operation.
V i FRIDAY And SATURDAY
E£sUs??uSM* Frj day Nite Till 8 - Saturday Till 6:30
WEEK END SPECIALS 8§
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s
7
Mi
DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: My 4y 2 -year-old
boy is very stubborn. As I have nobody to
leave him with while I go shopping, I have
to take him with me. The problem is he
wants something in every store we go into.
Even in a drugstore he runs to a candy rack
and won’t leave until I buy him some. It is
no use to explain that he has candy, toys,
pencils, cake and other things at home. He
doesn’t listen but just says .” over nad over.
“Buy it for me, buy it . .
ANSWER: He doesn’t want all this stuff