The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, June 21, 1954, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4 Tht Newt-Review, Roteburg, Of. Mon. June 21, 1954 I
Publishad Daily Except Sunday by th
News-Review Company, Inc.
litirU M wen elit mftiur My 1. lit. lb Mrt t
Battbarf, Omsb in4tr el ! Mttcb t. Hit
CHARLES V. STANTON Editor and Marugar
Mambar of tho Associated Press, Oregon Nowipopor Publishers
Association, tho kudit Bureau Circulations
BWMUltt WEST-HOLLIDAI CO., WO, (ItoM la Mtw (ok, Cklof.
tanMieo. Lot AaiMM. SMItlt, Portland, tan
IUBSCB1PT10N RATU In OrafoaBr
tbrM mono Bias OutrtH OwaooM am- .
ST.QO; thru montol. 13.90.
Br N.wlUvuw Crrl-P Xm. 100 Ua. advuctl. I"""'
so notta. 01.U.
. COMPOST FROM SAWDUST
Charles V. Stanton
A process by which sawdust is converted into commer-
n...nH faff io PUIWir tnH hv t.hp. Kant Orefionian
Pendleton. It is reported that a company is considering
Pendleton as a site for a production plant. Pilot plant
operations, it is stated, show sawdust to be an ideal raw
The process, according to
used heretotore on a large scaie in convening
fertilizer. ,
Municipal garbage is subjected to a bacterial process
lllirimuuMuii ul oycii. v ,
position. Garbage is digested, deodorized and converted
:A fftwt i 1 innw urifViir, OA in 3fl Viniirn.
IIIMJ cuiliiueiiiai it-iuiii niwJ'ii vv ww ..
Thousands of strains of break-down bacteria are known
to exist, but in the process used for conversion of sawdust
into fertilizer, 56 strains, proaucea oy an eastern
t ..t.-K,,l
lUiy, DID UWllflCU.
Describing the process as
z,asi yjregoman says ;
Trueko dump tho row garbaa Into o hoppor from which It it
convoyod to tho top section of tho dlgoitor whoro It it baetarially
Inoculotod. Horo tho essential oniymoi form, creating ttmpr
etur.s of approximator 80 to 100 dogroot. By meant of ipocial
plow mechanism tho matarlal l circulated long enough for
theto bacteria to become predominant, and then patett to tho
next toction where tho proteolytic bactorio raiio the temper,
turo to 100 to 110 dogroot, and decompose the proteins to
amino acids, ammonia nitrate and nitrate.. The third toction
has tomperoturet of 110 to 130 degrees for tho cellulose bacteria
to break down tho hemi-cellulose, olphe-celiuicses and finally
digest tho lignln. ..Thence to tho fourth section, whore tho tem
perature rises from 130 to 184 degrees, at which time tho heat,
loving or thermic bacteria take over, further granulating, dry
ing up, and pasteurising the material. The bactorio create tho
heat by oxidation; tho heat it maintained by thermostatic con
trols which regulate tho air Intake and exhaust dampers for
each taction. . The lest sections servo to further dry tho material.
At tho material omerget It it ground, and can be told as o
superior typo compost.
Sawdust Value Well Known
The value of sawdust as a fertilizer is well known.
Here in Douglas County tons of waste material are used
for that purpose annually.
The great drawback irr the use of raw sawdust is the
time required for elimination of the various resins by nat
ural process and the decomposition of the cellulose.
The bacterial process described by the East Orcgonian
is said to work exactly the same as the method Mother Na
ture uses in converting sawdust into good fertilizer, but the
result is achieved in a few hours rather than in one or two
years. The process is secret and a royalty must be paid'
io the laboratories furnishing the bacteria.
If, as officers of -the new corporation claim, the process
works as efficiently on sawdust as on raw garbage, the
way is open for a new industry, utilizing materials now
going to waste. The corporation proposes to start produc
tion with pine sawdust, which, renortedly, is more adapt
able than sawdust from Douglas Fir. Undoubtedly how
ever, the same process can be made applicable to Douglas
Fir sawdust, thus affording commercial outlet for a type
of material now being burned in hundreds of burners scat
tered throughout Douglas County. It is another way in
which we can see opportunity for making more jobs and
producing more income without cutting one more tree
than is now being cut.
PARIS W A man stepped into the hotel lounge and
said quietly:
"The government has just fallen."
Porhans there was frenzied excitement in French circles
over Premier Lanicl's downfall, but the collapse of
France's 19th post-war government created less stir in
the hotel lounge than if a patron had risen and accidently
upset an ashtray.
The barman looked no impas
sively at the news, then bent down
and finished mixing his drink with
out the slightest change of ex
pression. It was as if he were an
American League fan and some
one had just remarked a game in
the National League had been
rained out.
The American tourists in the
lounge, including a number of
lormer war correspondents, began
taking inimatcdly about what the
new government crisis meant. A
few Frenchmen present listened
curiously lo the conversation.
None volunteered a comment.
None said I.aniel was a bum and
deserved to topple. None protested
ne was a hero. None gam he was
Bood n an trvins lo carry out .VN'o. not DeCmiNe. It is not ncce-
bad program or a had man stuck
with a Bond nroeram.
Thov bad or so it seemed to
me the half-bored, half-amusrd
Irdiffrrence of a group of Broad- j
way characters at a night club
casually cavesdropo.ng on a table
of Texans talking about how much
"' "" ' jam ram. ,,r, W(rc pedling blooms as
A waiter rente hy. I ordered a , Tllf h ,u, were bu,v
drink and asked "have you hearo I Th, on,v k , f , ,
r,vs J! h" lu" na,lcn? !"e waiting ior the bus to tako
iiv-!.' -n ' ""'m lonH voyage home,
n,i2 d 1 "Cm ' " ind Ihey studied their newspaper
pri$, i" silence.
"You don't seem verv concerned I ,. A!0,n ,he Sl'in' f"'
either. Doesn't it worrv vou that !'"t fishermen .y! patiently lots
another French government ha. '". ''D" Jn,. lhf "ream, philoso-
fallen
"Why should II?" he shrugsrl.
"I worry about what concerns me.
1 take care of mvself first then
the other fellow."
"Is that the way most Frcncn
men feci''
"I would say ves."
"Have most Frenchmen alwavs
felt lhat way?"
"Perhaps not." He said, after a
moment of reflection. "But it is
the way they have felt since thi
last war.'
'Who would vou like lo see run
the government of France Gen
eral DeUaulle?"
"No, lot DcGaulle," he said.
mU - Pe ar, OlJOOt tut mnh .
the Eaxt Oregoman, has been
it is applied to garbage, the
'But it is a matter of little mo-
.nent to me. They are all out for
lite money. Me, I take care of my
self first, too."
Later I asked an assistant man
arr of the hotel tho same ques
I'ons. He had much the same at-
i litudc as the waiter that the gov
ernment cf prance was nanny ni.
personal problem, and he had his
own life to worry about.
When I asked him what he
thought of present French pnlilica',
leaders, he said very seriuisly:
"They are all lor. small. France
ne'ds a stronger man."
"How about DcGaulle?"
DeUa.ille?' he looked pai.icd.
sary to be a general to be strong.
Fiance needs a strong man like
Clemrnceau yes. another Clr
meneeau. But one docs not meet
manv Ck-mrnceaus in a lifetime,
isn't it so?"
n,.f . .. a. . I it, nnrni'il
,,.,, o( parj Ued The nower
hose overgrown minnows which" is
alxiut all you ordinarily ever see
anyone catch in the Seine.
The dropping lines make Small
rippies in the water. And, for all
a guy fn.m oul of town could tell,
that is abmit all the Lill of France'
11th post war government did. It
made a ripple on the common
p'ace. No more.
In the tidal limes we live In, it
would have been more encourag
ing lo have seen si-mothing bigger
than a ripple. There have been
times in Fiance's pa. I when the
fall of a government stirred waves
of purpose throughout the world.
I'l.i, , , mil i iw m jnartj unr ji
That's Why
"-(I2ruce
The frieht felt by many Ameri
cans in the face of the Communist
menace is genuine. And mere can
no doubt that it is sounoiy
based. We have seen enough of
the Reds' pattern of world con
quest and their internal depreda
tions to realize we are not in
volved in a child's game.
Still, many signs exist uiat wr.a
lot of us these fears play too
great a daily role. One would think
America had no strength, no re
sources of its own, to throw into
the steady combat against the
Communist peril.
A Democrat walks out of a
House committee hearing in pro
test against what he deems unfair
besmirching of men's reputations.
visitor obviously equating the
Democrat's action with treason.
addresses him as "Malcnkov as
he leaves.
This same group, the Reece
committee, appears to lie engaged
in trying to show that new ideas
are to be dreaded like germ war
fare. Its evident thesis is that men
who dare In advance new ideas,
nr merely Io accept Ihcm, are
guilty of some sort of massive
plot against "the public interest
Over and over we are told of
purported plots and conspiracies,
in terms which suggest we are at
ihe mercy of the Communist dev
ils and that our democratic idea'.s
:annot stand to he held up be
side the moth-eaten garb of tyr
anny. What kind of people are we. any
way? Are we so timid that we
must listen to jittery counsel
which tells us there is a Commu
nist under every bed and maybe
Private Power Offers
Greater Taxation Return
SITHF.RLIN The reason thai
Washington state has more alum
inum plants than Oregon is be
oa'ise (he Columbia River runs
he full width of that state and
furnishes the electric power nec
essary lor production of the metal.
he issue ol privaie power vj
public power has two side, to the
debate, winch is frequently over-
'ookcd? In the V. S. about fifty-
five per cent of the electricity
meliorated is in private corporale
p'ants, nearly forty-live per ce.il
pihlic plants such as the federal
government, power districts and
municina'ities. From both kinds
i the federal government or treas
ury receives a net of slightly less
than a billion dollars in net profiis
and taxes Of this amount 750 mi;
j I'cn is paid by the private enter
i nn'-e plant, something over 200
j " n , nro'-ts ' " in' ;
power project-' In addition the
...v-ie v-nicrprise companies pay
alioul twenty times as much to
stales, school districts municipal
aeencies as do the public power
interests.
In addition to this any dividends
paid hy private corporations are
ivubect to income tax. and Hie
II. S. gets another whack at the
glins.
The general taxation bill of pri
vate ulilily engaged in the power
eneratiop. runs twenty per cent
or more While public federal
projects receive tremendous ap
propriations from the public funds.
Public power has creat advan
tages over private poer; but just
like most Rovernnient business it
has one handicap. Public business
is politics, private business n
survive must he efficient sod sue-1
ressful in balinrini income and
outgo.
W. J. MU'IIKWS,
Sulherlin. Ore.
It's So Hard to Get
$2io55at'
even under every Army cot?
We hear much these days about
men who are "soft on commu
nism." Beyond doubt, some men
heve been just that. But the fears
of that menace would not be so
greatly magnified if there were
jot a lot of people in this coun
try who are soft on Americanism.
This is a country renowned for
uearly 180 years for the power and
example of its democratic idea's.
us aevouon io uDeriy in au us
forms.
This is a country with the ma
terial might and the human ski,.s
to outproduce as it did toward
the close of World War II ALL
its allies and enemies combined.
This is a country which giv?s
a, higher standard of living 'o
more people over a wider area
than any other nation on earth.
This is a country which in us
every characteristic act and mood
is the living refutation of the Com
munist myth. Americans prove
every day they get up and work
and think that the free do best in
this world.
This is a nation, too, which must
he acknowledged when all its
assets, the material, the human
and the spiritual, are added to
gether as the greatest power
on the face of the globe.
Let us be alert and prepared
for our very real perils. But let
us meet them as the men of
slrength and vision we really
are, not as fightened children who
i.nagine Ihey have no safety from
the world i cruelties.
Two Witnesses
Are Friendly
During Hearing
PORTLAND un
Tin. Vp1.Ii
committee had on tap Saturday
for testimony in its hearing into
Communism here, a dozen wit
nesses who were expected to be
balky.
There was a foretaste of this
late Friday after two star wit
nesses had filled most of the first
day of the hearing with fricndly-to-the-committee
testimony.
Barbara Ilarlle, convicted Com
munist who through the week at
Seattle had told the House t n
Aiucrican Activities Committee the
names of persons she said were
engaged in Communist activity in
Washington state, was flown here
and talked largely about Commu
'; J " T.
a.d h duln t kn
b' on P"
L'""1 h' "':'"
nist philosophy and organization.
know loo much
activities.
omer Owen.
30, told of his membership in the
party while a Reed College stu
dent and he named a score of for
mer students he said also were
party members.
Three witnesses, wluise names
had been mentioned earlier by
Owen, refused to answer the com
mittee's questions. They are John
McKenzie, 30. a former Reed stu
dent who Owen said had been ex
pelled from the party for "anti
leadership'' views; Kenneth Fitz
uerald, 46, a free lance writer;
and J ami Dyhr, 40, an automo
bile salesman.
vetde said their refusals may
lead to eoniempt citations.
Daniel Martin Ordered
Held For Court Trial
PHOENIX, Arir Of - Daniel J.
M.irsin, an unemployed welder,
.talurilay as ordered held for su
perior court trial on a charge of
kidnaping for ransom.
The 41-year-old Marvin was ar
rested a week ag.i following III-'
alHluetion and release of Mrs. Kv-
elyn Ann Smith, wile of a Phoenix
industrialist.
Her husband. Herbert, said he
oaid Vh OHO as directed hv several
notes. 1e money was found near
ilhe pavoff seene in Uie Supcrsti -
'tion Mountains.
Rid of Him!
' r v
In The Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Senator Potter of Michigan say;
(with a biting touch of sarcasm;
that he thinks the principal accu
sations of both sides in the Mc
Carthy controversy have been
borne out.
I- At any rate. It has been a big
was lung ot dirty unen in puonc.
About the only Consolation that
can be drawn from it is the fair'y
well established fact that if the
htuse is full of dirty linen it bet
ter be washed and hung on the
line out in the sun.
Dirty linen, when hid away, gets
smelly.
Radio and television people esti
mate they have devoted ten mil
lion dollars worth of time to the
hearing. Radio and television are
primarily entertainment enterpris
es. Their estimate indicates the
value they placed upon it as a big
show.
I'd lik to add, however, that
the fabulous play that was given
to the McCarthy hearing by ra jio
and television has been a good
thing for the country. People have
felt that direct viewing and di
.'ect listening have given them an
accurate picture of what has been
going on. with no personal shad
ing or slanting.
That lends interest to the con
clusions of George Gallup, the
best known of the professional
pollsters. He says McCarthy's pop
ilarity hit its peak in January
of this year, when M) per cent of
those questioned by his intervie'7-
ers were pro-McCarthy. 29 per cent
were against him and 21 per cent
had no opinion. Between January
and May. he dropped 15 points,
the May figure being 3S per cent
in favor of McCarthy, 45 per cent
against him and 16 per cent hav-
ine no opinion.
In early June, the situation more
3r less iPvelled otf. with 34 pr
cent favorable 4;i per cent un-
fsvorahlc and 21 per cent no on in
ton. . iai;up repons mat in ia;e
May and early June there was a
marked drop in Republican senti
ment favorable to McCarthy and a
rise in his favor among farmers,
residents of the Middle. West and
rank-and-file Democrats.
Bouncing from our big national
seandalfest. South Korea's prime
ninister has resigned. President I QUANTICO, Va. 11 Adm. Ai
Rhee accepts his resignation, ana ! tlmr Radford, chairman of the
adds: Joint Chiefs of Staff, said todi y
"Let's not have a prime minis- 'America s military planners can
ler at all. Korea should operate1 not be certain when "the next
with a oresident alone. I'M (he war" migtit come or if it does.
i . ..
I PreMaf
Louis XIV of France, known in drawn-nut affair."
History a.' the Magnificent Mon-; Radford was scheduled to lay
arch, felt the same way about it ' this and other military planning
md spoke in similar words: ; problems on the line before the na
"L'etat e'est MOI!" (the state Finn's defense leaders in a secret
that's MF.ll j session of the Dcfeiio" Secretaries'
Look at France now. Annual Conference here.
! In excerpts from his prepared
But. you say. the trouble with remarks that were made public,
France is poer divided amonj ! Radford made clear he belitvea
too many hands with NOBODY ; the uncertainties of the world a t
having power enough to do AN'Y- uation put this country in a post
THING, rather than too much pow-: tion "where we have to place
er in too few hands. greater reliance on eomhal readv
True enough, I suppose. : forces in being." He also said
But atomic power by itself is not
France got into her preser.t enough.
mess as j revolt against too much ,
power in too few hands over Iod Five Americans Held
n.anv centuries and as so often D w- . l b l i
happens has gone to the other ex ! Dy Vierminn KeoeiS
treme.
Over the long pull, too much
power in too few hands ALWAYS
causes trouble.
LOGGER KILLED
F.t'GF.NK i Almo Beck. 0.
Wostfir, Ore., a bucker for tne
F.dwin Hines Lumber Co.. was
Tslally crushed by a log Fridav
while wo.kinj at a woods operation
14 miles northeast of Westfir.
Survivors include the widow, a
daughter and four sons.
PROTESTER JAILED
WASHINGTON .f A tall.
ibie totintr man came to the
rsmiol Fridav to irotest the end
of the McCarthy - Army hearings
1 He was taken In a hospital for
I nenlal observation.
Editorial Comment
From Thtj Onon Prei
AN IMPORTANT OREGON t0! i
Medford Mail-Tribune
One of Oregon's most profitable
crops is not considered as a crop
at all, at least not as a product of
the soil, but it deserves consider-
aUon as a crop just the same, lor
year aSer year it brings a rich
return. It requires no planting.
very little care and yet engages
the attention of many thousands
In its harvest. Unlike other crops,
most of those who engage in the
harvest pay handsomely, one way
or another, for the privilege, in-
Head ol receiving pay. ..alhumoer croo this vear too. the
The croc we
w -
nual deer output.
Last year hunters Drone au pre
vious state records in their "har
vest," bagging 105,601 animals, ac
cording to figures compiled by
the Oregon State Game commis
sion. Of the 196,351 hunters who took
to the woods last fall over half
were successful in getting a deer.
Bucks represented 64 per cent of
the total kill.
Mule deer bagged east of the
Cascade mountains made up ap
proximately two-thirds of the to-
Senator Mundt
Urges Speedy
Pentagon Action
WASHINGTON OB Sen. Mundt
(R-SD) indicated today he would
go along with a Democratic de
mand that the Pentagon speed an
swers to requests for security
clearances on two Senate Investi
gations subcommittee appointees
of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis).
Sen. McClellan of Arkansas, sen
ior subcommittee Democrat and
speaking for the three minority
party memoers, demanded pudiic
ly yesterday that the subcommit
tee move fast to find out why, as
he out it. the two have not re
ceived Defense department secur
ity clearance on classified docu
ments for which application was
marlp more than a year ago.
"I will second it," Mundt said
in an interview, if McClellan will
ask the Pentagon "lo take up
these cases and say yes or no.
on applications
Aside from Mundt's comment
there was little sign of harmony
hetween the Republican and Dem
ocratic members in the wake of
the erouo's first closed-door meet
ing yesterdav following the hear
ings' end Thursday. The group
plans future similar get-togethers
for the job of writing up their
report. , ,
Mundt said he understands the
two subcommittee staff members,
who have not been named, have
not specifically been denied clear
ances despite a delay of 14
months in one case and IS months
in the other
But he said "it is manifestly un
fair to the individual to take so
long" because - the delay raises
possibly umair questions aooui
them.
Mendez-Fronce
Names Cabinet
PARIS ii Premier Pierre
Mendes-France Saturday named
his new cabinet the 20th since
France's liberation 10 years ago
of 16 ministers and 13 secre
taries of state. He kept the for
eign ministry for himself.
Two members of the cabinet
were from the popular Republican
Movement which had ordered its
members to abstain from tho vot
ing when Mendes-France was eon
firmed. The two MRP members named
were Robert Buron, minister of
overseas territories, and Andre
Monteil, secretary of state for the
navy.
Mendes-France named Edgar
Faure minister of finance, a job
he held in the f,aniel government.
Gen. Pierre Koenig, a follower of
Gen. Charles de Gaulle, was ap
pointed minister of defense.
Francois Mitterand, who re
signed from the Lanicl cabinet be
cause of differences of policy on
French Union affairs, was named
minister of the interior.
Radford Says Military
Planners Job Tougher
whether it would be short and
"violently destructive'' or a "lone
SAIGON'. Indochina m Author.
ued French military sources said
today five American Air Force
t technicians missing since Monday
I have been captured by the Com
I munist-led Vielmmh.
A French command spokesman
i said that the men were captured
j in the village of My Khe about a
j mile south of the beach where
1 they had gone on patrol.
The men, stationed at the
i French Air Force Base of Tour,
ane 450 miles east of Saigon, were
taken into the village, then march
! ed southward by their rebel rap
I tors, the spokesman said. Thov
were reported last seen by villag-
i ers about
10 miles soum ot Mv
! Khe trudging along wilb ?o French
1 1 mon war prisoners. None art
Ifrom Oregon.
ul kill, the remainder being black-
lain irom western iicgun.
It has been figured that the
average successful deer hunter
pays out around $2 40 for each
pound of meat he brings back.
It has also been figured that the
average hunter, whether he gets
a deer or not, spends in the neigh
borhood of $120 per hunting trip
On the above basis it is easy
to class harveting last season's
deer crop as big business, almost
two million dollars being put into
circulation in the process.
Prospect are good for another
n - m a limsrifl
game supervisory bodies of Ore
gon and California, sportsmen's
groups and others interested have
it tigured. Meeting recently in
Klamath Falls the state, federal
and sportsmen's representatives
reported that production of fawns
last summer was the highest evei
recorded during the ten years that
comoarative records have been
kept. An average of 97 fawns per I
100 does was noted.
Due to the exceptionally mild
winter, a hish survival of deer
resulted and 17,615 tracks were
counted crossing the stale line
from California to Oregon summer
ranee in the annual migration.
The track count is made along a
20-mile stretch running parallel to
the state line roao. a oust uau is
made by means of a spring-tooth
harrow and drag and smoothed
out after each day's count.
The count this spring compares
with a previous high of 17,570 in
1951 and a low of 9,665 in 1948.
Six thousand more deer were
counted this year than in 1953.
-E.C.F.
Hanford Atomic
Agreement Made
On Wage Issue
RICHLAND 11 Contract rev!-!
sions cailing for wage increases
totalling approximately $1,200,000
year for 8,700 General Electric
employes at the Hanford atomic
project nave been agreed upon,
the company, announced Friday.
Contract modifications affecting
holiday pay and liberalization of
a vacation plan also were included
in the agreement.
The agreement, which will make
the annual long rate of payroll
'or the company approximately
350,720,000 a year, is subject to
approval by the Atomic Enerjy
Commission and i membership
vote of the unions
Agreeing to a company proposal
made May 25 were the AFL un
ions, the Hanford Guard's Union,
the Building Service Employees
international Union and the Han
ford Atomic Metal Trades Coun
cil, which bargains for about 20
smaller unions.
While the unions represent' only
3.500 employes, the company offer
llso applies lo the remaining 5,M0
employes
The -encral wage increase
raises the average pay approxi
mately $2.68 weekly, with a mini
mum increase of SI .60 per week.
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING
The annual meeting of the stockholders of the
Umpquo Savings ond Loan Association will be held
at 147 North Jackson Street, Roseburg, Oregon, on
Wednesday, June 23rd, 1954, at 7:30 o'clock P.M.
for the election of directors and for the transaction .
of such general business as may properly come
before the meeting.
UMPQUA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSN.
H. O. PARGETER
Secretary-Manager
Order Your Wood Supply Now
SUPPORT THE INDUSTRY THAT SUPPORTS YOU!
Planar End Petler Cara, 16" er 2' Sawdutf
16" Green Woad
iii ii
mmmm
?.'v W i.l-.V
viv.-v-.1-.
m
Morie Attacks Atomic
Energy Disposition
WASHINGTON JH "Monopo
lUtic forces see an opportunity for
a quick economic killing" in atom
ic energy, Sen. Morse of Oregon
taid Friday.
Discussing a bill now pending
in the Senate-House Atomic Ener
gy Committee which would permit
private industry to own reactors
or atomic energy plants under
government regulation, Morse said
it would lie a "great mistake" to
give industry "carte blanche" con
trol over atomic development.
Private firms which enter tne
atomic energy power field should
be required to pay "dollar for dol
lar" for the public investment
which Monse said totals billions of
dollars.
Referrir.g to the current contro
versy over administration of tho
Atomic Energy Commission,
Morse said that as understood the
oolicies of the AEC chairman,
i.ewis L. Strauss, it is essentia,
"that a check be kept on Strauss'
authority."
FILM FINISHING
In by 9 om, ready at 5 pm
Roseburg Pharmacy
241 Nerth Jeckiea ,
Wake up with a smile...
MS
WITH THE
HARRY
BABBITT
SHOW
Music Fun Wtathtr
Monday-Friday
7:45 am
KRNR
YOUR CBS STATION
was
1 S W4