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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1954)
2 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, County Official Talks To Bureau By MRS. BRITTAIN SLACK Caiapooia Farm Bureau held a meeting Tuesday at the Caiapooia clubhouse. The meeting followed a potluck supper, served by the hostesses, Mrs. Laurance Haines and Mrs. Gerald Bacon. Guest speaker was 0. J. Killiam. Canyonville. county vice president of the Farm Bureau, whose talk included facets of soil conserva tion and flood control. Carl Hunter reported that a pe tition for a hearing on a soil con servation district had been sent in and that a hearing would be held in the district in the near future. After the business meeting, scenic pictures and movies of the Oregon and California Coast were shown by Kuuam. ' At the next meeting, to be held Tuesday, March 9, there will be a movie oj great interest to stock man (the movie will be on culling sheep). About 40 members and guests were present. Potluck suppers will be diseon tinned during the following months and the next meeting will begin at 8 o clock. Republicans Temper Final Lincoln Day Talks (Continued from Page One) down the wage payer. You cannot further the urouicrnood ot man by encouraging class hatred. You can not help the poor by destroying the rich, you cannot establish sound security on borrowed money. You cannot keep out of trouble by spending more than you earn. You cannot build character and cour age by taking away man's initia tive and independence. You cannot help men permanently by doing for them what they could and should do for themselves." The magazine article as reprint ed in the Congressional Record said Boelcker wrote the sentences in 1916. It said thcy were distrib-1 utcd wicieiy by me committee or , of Moif01.( visilcd with the Constitutional Government, credit- m Dobyns family here last Sun ed to Boelcker, along with an au- day Anothcr reCent visitor was thentic Lincoln statement. i ,nnther sister and her husband. Meanwhile, Sen. George (D-Ga) said the Republican - Democratic battle over GOl' charges of Com munist coddling may not, after all, have much lasting effect. 'This is a political year and you've gjt to expect things like that," the veteran Georgia Dem ocrat said in an interview. With congressional elections coming this year, he said he soesn't think anything much can be done to stop the infighting. Ropublican speakers with some notable exceptions loaded their oratorical artillery for the big Lincoln Day barrage yesterday with much the same sort of de nunciation that had already brought Democratic complaints. Democrats have accused some GOP sokesmen of going beyond the laws of political warfare by Kecking, so til c Democrats said, to fasten the epithets of communism and treason on the minority party. President Eisenhower this week advised his fellow party members against extreme partisan utter ances. Child Sees Father Crushed By Truck Bed COTTAGE GROVE Ul Tilman Stroud, about 45, was crushed to death Friday when a dump truck bed crashed down on him. Stroud reached under the raised truck bed to release a lever, lhc heavy truck bed came down acci dentally, crushing him against the frame. Strmids four-year-old daughter saw the accident, which occurred near the tamily home here. I The Atkins Saw Division of Borg-Warner Corporation is proud to announce the appointment of the Marshall Wells Company as the distributors of their complete line of Band Saws, Circular Saws, Saw Bits, Knives, and Allied Products. For any information con cerning the Atkins Products call: Clyde Knight Industiial Sales Represent ative of the Marshall Wells Company Phone Roseburg 3-3116 or Write 2203 Todd Street, Roscbuig, Oregon YOUR BODY ROSEBURG, OREGON Thcu hoolth rtlclet are written and paid for by Dr. B. A. SMITH, Chiropractic and Naturopathic Phyliclon, 1J00 Garden Volley Road, in tha tnrarett of public health ond to help you understand tha body function. Look for theia Informally articles every Saturday. To understand diseases of the nervous system, one must remem ber that this system is concerned with both motion and sensation. and that diseases or injuries of nerve centers or of nerve trunks may cause disturbances of motion or sensalion in pans of the body far removed from where the di seased or injured areas are lo cated! Furthermore, there are dis turbances of activities of the vi tal organ.i due to diseases or ab normalities of the autonomic nerves that mus be taken into ac count. One shculd remember, however, that all of the other organs and svstems nfluence. and are influ enced by; the nervous system ami null do uii-m: omul-Hi e, mm mi- in fltienced by, the mental processes. Psychology, then is not solely the urdersi.-intiti" of mental il'n"ss. Physical and nervous disorders often lie at the root of what on the surface may seem to be strict ly mental derangements, and must be detected and corrected before mental health can be re stored. It is probable that Um physical 0r. Sat. Feb. 13, 1954 Glendale Assembly Young People Home Meetings Continue By MRS. G. B. FOX The Youne People of the Glen dale Assembly of God Church have resumed regular Sunday eve ning meetings at the church. For several weeks these meetings were replaced by home meetings, in which the young people sang for shut-ins. The group will con tinue to meet at various homes, but will do so on Saturday night from now on. Return To Arkansas Mrs. Mary I.in Richardson and small son, Charles, and her sister, Madeline Lee, left Wednesday for Arkansas. Madeline, who lives in St. Charles, has been visiting here and will return home. Mrs. Rich ardson will visit both in St. Charles and in Benton. The Glendale radio program over the Grants Pass station last Saturday featured Shorty Clayton and Frank Daniels as newscast ers. Mrs. Dorothy Hurst drove to Los Angeles a few days ago to take her mother, Mrs. Kathcrine Payne, home following an extended visit with the family here. Mrs. Hurst was to return here this weekend. Gertie Collins from Chico. Calif., has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Ed Tolin, in Glendale. Mrs. Collins is a former Glendale resi dent. Grecian Lftads Contributions In the post office March of Dimes collection, which featured jars labeled for each of the 48 states, Oregon came oui ancau with contributions of $4.69, and Oklahoma was next in line. The total amount in the jars was $31.- 45. Ted and NiUa Dobyns from Med ford visited their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dobyns, of Glen dale this past week. Their parents, the Arthur Dobyns, will come for the youngsters Sunday. Mrs. Mnble Cox from Mcdford. sister of Mrs. Bill Dobyns, and ..,.:. moHlor. Mrs. Lcnora Flury Ml. an(1 Mrs. Ray Gungcr, from (Jhiloouin. Mrs. Ima Jean Jackson and son. Phillip, returned Sunday from an extended visit in Benton, ArK, Glendale Infant Dies At Canyonville Hospital William A. Kreftmeyer, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Kreftmeyer, Glendale, died Feb. 11 in the Forest Glen Hospital, Canyonville. He was born Fob, 1 in Glendale. Surviving besides the parents are a brother, David, and a sis ter, Anna, both of Glendale; his grandpartens, Mr. J. W. Wallace, Oroville, Calif.; C. II. Kreftmeyer, Eureka, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. 0. II. Oakley, Roseburg. : Funeral services were held this afternoon at 2 p.m. in the Chapel of The Hoses, Roseburg Funeral Home, with the Rev. Valerie Cleve land officiating. Interment was in the Roseburg Memorial Gardens. FUNERAL HELD Funeral services were held in Portland Thursday for Glenn Good man, 61, who died in Seattle Sun day. lie is survived by his wife, the former Lucille Ragsdalo of Hose burg. Goodman clerked at Church ill Hardware Store (or many years before moving to Seattle. DR. MILLAR SPEAKER Dr. James Millar, Roseburg Presbyterian minister, was fea tured sneaker Friday at Coos Bav for the Coos County Republican Club's Lincoln Day batyiuet. bases for the emotional impulses arc the gray nuclei which are sit uated at the base of the brain. From those nuclei, fibers run to ward the so-called silent areas in the forebram and it is believed that through those fibers an emo tional tone is imparled to man's thoughts. In . this region two streams of consciousness meet - those of thought or cognition and emotion. The intermingling of these strr ams of thought and feel ing is necessary for the psychic life; one reacts upon the other. Neurasthenia, a common nerv ous disease is a neurosis or func tional nervous disorder character ized by a tendency to mental and pnysicai laligue. lt may arise irom an attempt to protect one self from he difficulties encoun ercd in daily life. The quick and prolonged fatigue is often due to absorption and waste of mental energy in repression anil conflict. The principal consideration, how ever, is not to overlook some oc eanic disease which mav hit nt-es- ent accomnsnving the nervous dis order. iPd. AeJr.) STEADY TEDDY Duano Compton, of Wichita, Kan., has a dog named Teddy that has a keen sense of balance, and if there's a ride he hasn't been on, it's because he hasn't heard of It. At present Teddy is riding around on a motor scooter which has a doggy" rumble seat Teddy is also a veteran of motorcycle driv ing at speeds of 70 to 05 miles per hour. Financial Scheme In Japan Fails; Promotor Jailed TOKYO W The ceiling has fall en in on postwar Japan's biggest financial 'schomc and Japanese, from politicians to Buddhist priests arc picking the piaster out of their hair. Three lop political parties, in cluding the Liberal par.' of Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida, are scurrying out from under the wreckage of the 12-million-dollar invcs'imerat company, Iloazen Kci zai Kai. Goveiment investigators said the company's wizard, Matsutomi Ito, 47, spread contributions lav ishly among the three top parties so he could use big names as advisers." Collanse of the company, due largely to misfired speculations in the stock market, caught hundreds ot tnousanils ot nousewives a no laborers. Their small investments, baited by promises of 15 per cent interest, had helped build the company. Also among those caught in the collapse was the abbot of a large Buddhist denomination. Company records show he collected contri butions from his flork and gave them to Ito to invest. Ito is n lai . charged with swin dling. Newspapers call htm Ja pan's "Ponzi," a reference to the Boston swindler who onee collect ed millions from gullible Ameri cans. Pope Pius Scheduled To Speak To World VATICAN CITY 1H convalesc ing Pope Pius XII will speak by radio Sunday to the world's sick. The announcement was ,V firm est sign that the 77-ycar-oul head of the Roman Catholic Church definitely is recovering. A gastric I ailment has contincu nun to his ; apartment since Jan. 25. j The ronuu s address win oc ; broadcast by the Vatican Radio, beginning at 7:15 p. ni. ( 10:15 a. m. PSD on medium wavelength 1 meters and short waves 49.75, 41.21. 31.10, 27.67 meters. L'Osser vatorc Romano said the Pope WUIIHI INC nisi wimus m nil- ; 10-minute address and that it would ! then be completed by a Vatican radio speaker. His address will be in conjunc- lion with the Marian Year observ- anee. loinineinoraiiiig ine ceiuen- ry of the dogma of the virgin , Mary's immaculate conception. It began on Dec. 8 last year and continues until Dec. 8, 19.VI. Iris Hclliwell Elected Broadcasters' Secretary EUGENE i.n The Oregon State ' Rroatlcasters Asn. is headed bv : Paul Waulcn ot KOHL. The Dalles, lie was elected Friday as Ihe first order of business at the annual meeting here. Walden succeeds S. V. McCreailv of Eugene's KVAt.-TV. Robert Holmes, KAST. Astoria, was elect ed vice president and Ins Hire Ilelliwell of KltXI,, Roseburg, was elected secretary-treasurer. Named directors were Richard Brown, KI'O.I, Portland, and Dave lloss, im,ai, Miiem. , fie isl $ favorite nvws roundup I COS Radio Newsroom ...Sunday Desk rrw' k-'jrWk. i - 5:30 xSr303 " SI KRNR Preparations Are Being Made For H-Bomb Test HONOLULU Ufl Preparations for the .coming hydrogen bomb test series in the Pacific are nearing a climax, according to indications in this strategic Pacific staging area. But there is no indication any of the planned scries of tests has actually started. A recent rash of Pacific area earthquakes has prompted specu lation that an H-bomb already has been exploded but seismologists nauy ucny me possibility ol any such connection. they say the big gest bomb yet devised by man is still a peanut compared to the eruptions ot nature. The tests, which will include the first trial of an actual combat designed hydrogen bomb, are ex pected in two or three weeks. U. S. Sabre Jet Hits Mountain VANCOUVER. B.C. Ufl A U.S. Air Force FStiD Sabre Jet, lost in rain-snrounea sxies wun useless instrumenis, crashed Friday on a the harbor here. The pilot was killed. Piloted by Lt. Lamar J. Bar low, 25, of Tacoma, Wash., the Sabre crashed in snow at the 2,-500-foot level of Grouse Mountain, a popular ski playground. The U. S. Air Force at McChord, Wash, confirmed that Barlow died in the crash. Wreckage was found 100 yards away from a chairlift climbing the peaK. ji s a six-mile drive Irom downtown Vancouver to the foot of the lifl. Pilot Barlow, married but child less, was last heard from iust aft- er noon Friday when he reported he was at 20.000 feet 15 miles northwest of the Vancouver air- port Stationed at McChord Field. near Tacoma, with the 465th Fight-er-lnterceotor Squadron, he was on a practice flight. '. I c I atassen Mops In Seattle Route J0 par East SEATTI.K Harold E. Stas- sen, director of the Foreign Opcr ;1,)ns Administration sinnnerl liri(.rly in S(.ae Friday night en route lo ear hast points. Stassen was accomnanied bv five of his assistants as he land ed at Seattle-Taeoma Internation al Airport. Their first stop will be Tokyo. foKowed by Manila, where they will attend a Feb. 22 meet ina of the Far East representa tives of TOA MAILMAN REMEMBERED OKLAHOMA CITY Post roan Jack Eldrulge hit a mail man's jackpot Fridtv. As he delivered liis mail, he round a present in nearlv every : bow Neighbors learned Eldrulee 1 and his wife were expecting their i first child and decided to surprise ; ineir tncndiy postman. CRS rorrrtpttmlf rtU dlrfrt from l.ontlon M HAhingtun- 'Ari minute nrcnunt from the world -1490 I . IL ii ii 1 Glendale School Cafeteria To Set Opening Soon By MRS. C. B. FOX AcEcording to James Pate, Glen dale superintendent the opening, of the high school cafeateria should ' not be delayed more than another two weeks. Delay in delivery of; needed equipment was responsible! for the cancelling of the originally planned opening dale. Mrs. Mary Harris nf ninnHnle line hnan hii-oH I as cook for the high school cafe teria. Son Born Mr. and Mrs Leon Griggsby are the parents of a seven pound, 10 ounce boy. born Feb 2 at the Glen dale Clinic. Duke Art, said to be the world's fastest clay sculptor, was featured at the National Assemblies pro gram held at the Glendale High School Wednesday. Older grade school cnildren were brought to the high school by bus to see the program in which Art displayed his ability to model clay figures in less than a minute. . The date for the dedication of the new Glendale High School has been set for March 8, Details for the program will be published la ter. Glendale residents who have liv ed in the area long enough to satisfy legal requirements for reg istering to vote, or who must re register before voting, may reg ister and get their precinct card at Boh Profitt's Glendale insur ance agency. Sammy Grace Jr., who has been receiving treatment for cancer in Eugene, ;s home for a month's rest. According to his father, he will have to return to Eugene March 8 to continue the treat ment. Charles Mill, who recently had his left leg amputated at the Com munity Hospital in Medford, re turned to his home here Feb. 5. Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lay are the parents of an eight pound, lOMi ounce baby girl, Donna Gail, born Jan. 31, at the Josephine Hospital in Grants Pass. Mr. and Mrs. Orie Hammon are the parents of an eight pound, one half ounce baby girl born Feb. 5, at the Glendale Clinic. Portland Doctor Arrested Again; Claims Robbery PORTLAND I Dr. George H. Buck, Portland, was arrested early Saturday on a new charge of man slaughter by abor'ion six hours after reporting that he had been beaten up and robbed in his of fices. It was his fourth arrest in less than three 'years. The new charge was based on a complaint signed by a friend of a 37-year-old woman who became ill alter an operation Friday morn ing. Buck was accused of perform ing the operation The doctor was released on $10,000 bail. Earlier police said Buck told them this story of the attack on him: A woman, accompanied bv two men, came to his office Friday evening. The men remained in the ante room while Buck examined the woman. When he opened the door to the ante room, the men beat him with their fists. They then taped is hands together and took $370 from his wallet. Detectives said there was about $500 in another compartment of the wallet. President Plans Atomic Message THOMASVILLE. Ga. UP - Presi- dent Eisenhower will send Con-1 gress a special message next week ! on peacetime use of atomic energy j by private industry in the United j States and on sharing of certain atomic information with America's allies. The President's plans were an-1 nounced here Saturday as he was : spending the weekend bird hunt- j ing as the guest of Secretary of uie 1 reasury Humphrey. ! James C. Hagerty, presidential . press secretary, told newsmen the ; special message to Congress will be in two main sections. One, said Hagerty, w ill outline j suggested legislation "lo encour age peacetime use of atomic en ergy in this country by private enterprise." The President, 10 quail lo his credit, arranged for an early start Saturday in a quest for more birds. Ceneral Contractors Grant 7-Ccnt Pay Raise PORTLAND A new wage agreemcn; granting a 7-cent hourly increase to construction workers was announced Fridav bv the As sociated General Contractors and AFL building laborers' union. The new pay scale, which goes into effect Monday, will increase the basic wag for some 6.000 Ore gon laborers to $2.17 an hour with specialists getting up to $2.67 an hour. This is the first agreement reached in current building trade negotiators, a management spokesman reported. Agreements are yet to be m.ule with carpen ters, cement finisners and iron workers. TV ANTENNAS Complete Installations Ask for Estimate Arvin, Sylvania, Stew.rt-Warner TV Sets FREE PARKING 300 S. Stephens St. Open Daily Till P.M. Gii'l Is Still Missing After Car Takes Plunge DAYVILLE, Ore. ttf Search was to continue here Saturday for a high school girl who was be lieved killed when an automobile plunged into the John Day River. Three youths escaped when the car went into the icy stream after failing to make a turn on the high way five miles southeast of Kim berly Thursday. Thev are Richard Gibson, 19, his brother, LeRoy, 14, and Glen Leg ler, 20. The Gibsons crawled out of the car and called police. Leg ler was not found until the next morning. He was about a mile from the accident scene on the other side of the river. He suffered frost bite, broken bones, cuts and bruises. He was taken' to a Prairie City hospital where attendants said Sat urday he was "doing satisfactorily-" Still missing is Jerry Donna Wright, 15, of Spray, who was in the car with the boys. Alaska Sawmill Is Proposed By Portland Firm JUNEAU, Alaska Wl Region al Forester A. W. Greeley said Saturday the Pacific Northern Timber Co. of Portland has asked the U.S. Forest Service to adver tise a timber sale in Alaska's Ton gass National Forest this spring. The timber would supply a pro posed sawmill at Wrangell as well as a possible pulp mill in the Wrangell area. In Juneau this week for discus sions with Greeley was C. Girard Davidson, attorney for Pacific Northern and for Georgia-Pacific Plywood, which has shown inter est in the possibility of a pulp mill and newsprint plant here. Greeley said they considered va rious localities for timber cruis ing in Southeast Alaska and areas where logging operations would begin to supply a Wrangell saw mill. Davidson said Pacific Northern had acquired a mill site about a mile from Wrangell, formerly oc cupied by a salmon cannery, wiicre it plans to construct a mil lion dollar mill. He said company engineers are expected to be in Wrangell in the spring and it was hoped that construction could start in the summer. The pulp mill, he added, is part of the company's plans for the future. Fred G. Hanford of Juneau and Wrangell, handling the company's housing plans, said these called for the eventual construction , of 200 houses. Regarding Georgia - Pacific's program, Davidson said this com pany was seeking suitable land here with a nearby water supply and expected to send a represen tative to Juneau this spring to look over mill sites and timber possibilities. Valentine Symbol Of Double Death HAWTHORNE, Calif, - The valentine in the apartment read: "The things we share together al ways make me happiest." On the floor lay the bodies of Mrs. Ruth McMillan, 42, of Port land. Ore., shot seven times, and Rocco James Christiano, 4,1, shot four limes. Near Chrisliano's body was a new revolver, bought four days ago. While police were investigating their deaths last night, the wom an's husband. John McMillan. 48. arrived. He told officers he had been here two weeks, trying to persuade his wife to leave ehristi ano, with whom she had occupied the apartment six months. Police said Cristiano's bags were partly packed. "He was leaving giving her the hrushotf," theorized Police Lt. M. M. Baumgardner. "She got him mad, and he shot her and then himself." Bay Bridge Ticket-Taker Is Victim Of Bandit SAN FRANCISCO trPi Mrs. Fay Shelton, ticket-taker in the Bay Bridge train station on Yerba uena Island in the middle of San Francisco Bay, was found dying in her booth last night, apparently the victim of a bandit. The middle-aged woman's limp form, hui'tiled in a pool of blood, was found by California highway patrolmen checkins her where abouts for her employer, the Key System Transit Lines. , She died without recovering con sciousness at the nearbv Treasure Island Naval Station Dispensary. jSan Francisco homicide inspectors said she had been shot and her receipts taken. IF YOUR PAPER HAS NOT ARRIVED BY 6:15 P.M. DIAL 2-2631 DOUGLAS HARDWARE y 'Ax lie 1m315E Phone 3-6167 Semtfoy Till 5:30 38-Inch Snow At Callahan, Resident Says By NETTIE WOODRUFF Word was recently received from Mrs. John Henry of Calla han Trail that the snow was 38 inches deep at Highland Park Ranch, Callahan Trail. On Leave Glenn Wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Wood, of Callahan Trail recently arrived home on ln.. t,m rmn Ponrllnton. When he returns to camp, he will attend i ..I knln-a Kaind chinnr-fl i sea ainwi uuui c twie -...f-t- out. Mrs. Amy Seeley left Monday for Portland on business and for a physical checkup. She will re turn home the last of this week. Wesley Fowler went to Portland a week ago, where he entered Providence Hospital for medical care. Injuras Hand D. R. Manning, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Manning, recently cut one of his hands with a power saw, severing the ligaments be tween thumb and hand. The hand was attended by a Roseburg phy sician. Six stitches were required to close the wound. Little David Fowler recently re turned to his home following sev eral days care in the Mercy Hos pital. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Felt and the latter's brother, Bob Myer, and Mrs. Joyce Kingbury and her brother, Travis Richardson, spent last weekend in Portland attend ing the auto show and visiting friends. Clifford Wood recently got the road over the mountain to Calla han Trail district open to travel. He cleaned the snow from the road with his "cal" to Renfro Creek. From there he was able to get through by jeep. George Wilson recently arrived from Portland to assist in caring for his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs Charles heyes. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Wood spent Saturday in Roscbur shopping and attending business. Sutherlin Man Now In Alaska By MRS. BRITTAIN SLACK C. B. Erickson left Thursday noon for Seattle, and irom there he will go to a location near Ketch ikan, Alaska, where he will be employed in falling timber for a firm from Cottage Grove. Go Ts Roieburg Mrs. Evelyn Brown, Mrs. Le nora Payne and Mrs. Wanda Nor ris, were business visitors in Rose burg, Friday. Sutherlin will again have a cur few, which will be a one blast of the siren at 10 o'clock. The signal means that all children under the age of 17 must be off the streets unless in the company of an adult. The curfew was dispensed with several months ago, but will be put in force again, starting Feb. 15. Recent dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Van Hutcheson were: Fred Reeves of Elkhead, Mrs. Mabel Allen of Oakland, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pinkston of Elkhead and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Cheno weth, of Nonpariel. Tenmile Scouts Hold Regular Meet Monday Hie Black Hawk Cub Scout Den of Troop 126 met at the Ladies Clubhouse in Tenmile on Monday after school. They made valentines and discussed the Blue and Gold dinner to be held on Thursday evening. They also talke.1 over their plans for the coming meet ings. The boys voted to have Jody Brady as their den chief, smce Ossie Gray, who has been their den chief is soon leaving for Cali fornia. Those present were: Mrs. Aug ust DeGnath and Mrs. Monroe Ar nold, den mothers, and Ossie Gray, Ray Gray, Roger Mills. Jer ry Horn and Jody Brady, and Mrs. William Lofton. DANCE to the music ot JACK FOSTER And His Orchestra Every Saturday Night at Vet's Memorial Bldg. OAKLAND DANC AT MELODY MT. BARN Hwy 99 3 miles south of Myrtle Creek at Tri-City SATURDAY NIGHT 9 p.m. 7til 1 a.m. Featuring Music By Chuck And His Sons of The Saddle "Die management welcomes yout Dulles Rips Molorov't Austrian Treaty Plan (Continued from Page One) and Georges Bidault that it was impossible for the Austrian gov ernment to accept the Molotov proposal. He asked which of the Big Four would be willing to present such a proposition regarding his own country to his own parliament. The Western foreign ministers already have written off hope o( concluding an Austrian state treatv at this conference, although the debate on it will run into an w,-.n-Hinarv Sunday session. Some Western diplomats said they expected another secret meeting on tne r ar eastern suu. ation to be held Monday and it n,au ha that the ministers will have another go round on the problems of Germany and Euro, pean security. Western delegations now are uiussuib ivi tuiitmsiuu of the work here late next week. ritiltne haelfintf tin the Austria ans, ripped into Russia's program , wun tne cnarge mai n toiiianieu 'rviicnnniis npnnnsjile" for an '.Austria without freedom." -He expressed "earnest nope- mat Jloiotov wouia wunaraw nis ae manri in that a treatv mav be concluded immediately. . Water Content Of Snow Is Well Above Average (Continued from Page One) Falls): 4:i2,000 acre feet. Average is 393,800 In the Southwestern Oregon drainage division, precipitation has run over average since Sep tember. The division includes the Umpqua, Rogue and William son river systems. Rainfall average for the entire area has been 19.4 inches, which is 1.99 over normal. The heaviest has occurred inee Tec. 1 through Jan. 31, when 12.0S fell 3.70 inches over normal. Between Sept. 1 and Nov. 31, precipitation was below normal by 1.71 inches at 9.34 inchest Both snow-water content and precipitation have shown the biggest increase in the southwest ern part of the state, the surveys reveal. Snow-water in the Rogue watershed is 165 per cent of nor mal. ProtinHVion in Southwestern Oregon is 134 per cent of normal. Sunday at 6:30 P.M. CBS Radio Dial 1490 KRNR ADM. 1.00 per person tax included Radio goes Cpijl wherever Pv you go