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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1954)
nil1" JpJi Ceddes Discusses Major Problems On Legislature SALJBM tfl Two major prob- Utive sessions were outlined here uaiuraay oy raui t. lieddes, stale senator from Roseburg. He spoke in the course of a oanel group dis cussion at the Public Service For un Conference. .If all state administrative offi cials, he said, would give the Lc' islature actual facts, the Ways ami Means fAmmittu 1 J better and nuiplrnp tm 1 sa.d, officials make requests for nunc items wnicn are not im mediately required. What thov GKfl A 1 is to say what they actually must hav then aiM 1;. , ui thev shni.lri houn hit nnH JH out, without cutting heavily into Th AfhAl niUDlinn 1.. !J !. T Tier he le8islat've committees wuris on ine money bins " vmjwijoiih 01 wnat is need ed fir what pneh ie tiait-kl. This, he said, means should the r'i." a,m Means uommiuee await Timin0 nt tha T,- r1 :.-- shoulc; the Tax. Committee await uuuiugi ui me ways ana Means Committee. He Said ll wasn't OAintf 4a to give the answer to tnat but jucu ii neeaea siuay. Hells Canyon Assn. Voices Disapproval To Cougar Dam Partnership Construction 1 BEATEN Joey Ketrandrea, 3, in Detroit hospital after savage whipping by hit mother, Mrs. Rosemary Pietrandrea, 20, be cause be spilled a glass of milk. Joey told attendants "Mommy said she would iit me nntfl my head broke." His mother told him ts say be fen downstairs. All 'round PROTECTION for yoof personal property Anytime, Anywhere in the wortt Th PtrtonaJ Property Floattr Policy prolwcli you financially againil Ion of th ponorral belonging! of vry mem ber of yovr family as a riiult of luch peril ot Fire Theft Water Accidental Damage Explosion Loss in Transit Wind H leave nothing to thane, com plelely covering the gapt or loopholes which enlir when itporato limited form of tpeciflc fnivrance are ittued to cover certain named perils, let ut tell you abavt It today. T. H. Porgeter R. E. Porgeter Vic Lewis UMPQUA INSURANCE AGENCY WASHINGTON !l The Hells I Canyon Assn., Inc. said Saturday a proposal by the fcugene, urn. Water and Electric Board to join the federal government in con struction of Cougar Dam ."will in terfere with, impede and preclude fulfillment" of Columbia River do-7e'opmeni. The nro-nublic Dower oraaniia- ion expressed its view in a Peti tion representatives said would Be tiled with the Federal rower com mission, asking permislon to in tervene against the city's appllca tion for a preliminary permit on the Cougar site. The Hells Canyon group, com posed of members from Idaho, Oregon and Washington primarily, now is engaged before the Power Commission fighting the applica tions oi me laano rower lo. to develop the middle section of the Snake River between Idaho and Oregon. There the association fa vors a proposed federal dam, which could not be built if the Idaho Power proposals are ac cepted. The Cougar project, located on the South Fork of Oregon's Mc Kcnzie River, is one ot several Northwest dams proposed for con struction by the federal govera ment and local interests. The project has been authorized for construction by the federal gov ernment solely for flood control. A bill to permit the "partnership" construction, including power facil ities, has been approved by the House and now awaits action by the Senate Public Works Commit tee Another proposal, urging totai development by the federal gov ernment, was introduced Friday by Sen. Morse (Ind-Ore) and 13 Senate Democrats. ' The Hells Canyon Assn. petition asserts McKenzie River develop ment "should be undertaken ny the United States itself and should he fully integrated hydraulically and electrically with the federal Northwest water and power sys tems." Power from the Cougar Dam, the association said, should be "pooled and marketed in accord ance with the federal operatinj! and marketing system." The association said it felt the Eugene proposal, under which the city would pay all power costs of General Motors Cancels Big Ads the dam and retain right to the power, "would represent a dan gerous step In the direction of tragmentation or me leaerai com prehensive plan of development and federal integrated power sys tem in the Columbia River Basin. . . " It said clso that to have projects on the Columbia River jnd its tributaries "under a multiplicity of different kinds of management and operational criteria would throw the entire river basin into ennfusion and result in gross in efficiency and waste of resources." NEW YORK ll The publisher, and president of the Wall Street Journal says the General Motors Corp. apparently has cancelled all advertising in the business daiiy as a result of a story in the Joui nal forecasting 1955 automobile models. A General Motors statement. without mentioning cancellation ot advertising, stated objections to the story appearing, In the May 28 1SSJB OL UMJ juuruai. GM has been spending more thin $250,000 a year in advertising wita the newsnaper. In the story were drawings of che 1955 Chevrolet and Dodgo cars, presented as being "ren dered from the manufacturers' own blueprints." The article also included a sketch of the hood and grill of the 1955 Ford "based upon information and sketches from several informed industry sources.' ' No comment has been forthcom ing from the Ford or Chrysler companies. The Chevrolet is pro duced by General Motors, and the uoage py inrysier. Savings Bonds Sales Up For Month-Of May Douglas County savings bonds sales during May totalled 559,731, compared to only $27,956 during May iitM, according to unairmaD George Luoma. Statewide, there was a drop in sales of U. S. Treasury E and II bonds during the month, but totals for this year continue to be more than 52 million ahead of those in 1053. Yoncalla Serial Levy Vote Slated June 30 Voters in the Yoncalla Grade School District June 30 will cast ballots on a proposed $10,000-a year serial levy designed to run over the next five years to raise cash for building and equipping new schoolrooms. The proposal was defeated on May 3. Mrs. Berniece Radtke, school clerk, said that it was re submitted because of a poor turn out at the polls only 88 people voted. , She termed the levy as "purely good business," explaining that t'i a certainty that additional school space will be needed within the next five years. However, she continued, if it's found that there's no need for more building, the levy may be turned to the general fund for use Mon. June 21, 1954 The News-Review. Rottburf, Ore. 9 Washington Considers Agencies Headquarter OLYMPIA UI The State Su preme Court bad under- advise ment Saturday an appeal from Superior Judge Charles T. Wright's ruling that headquarters of 13 state agencies should be moved from Seattle to Olympia. In handing down his dci'isioc last March, Judge Wright &id the state capital should be precisely that in fact as well as in name. ?ne- state attorney general's of fice appealed to the supreme court. in the regular school budget. A levy, she explained, would cut out bond Interest should a bond issue otherwise be necessary for school construction. Oral arguments were heard by the high court Friday, and the matter was taken under consid eration. An opinion will o give 4 later. Dr. E. W. CARTER Chiropodist Foot Specialist Diseases of the Foot Roseburg, Oregon 217 North Main CARTER BUILDING TELEPHONE 3-7066 123 N. MAIN ;r",T -JL jj, J .- ON HER WAY Wearing a short hairdo and a white gown, Mieko Kondo, newly chosen Miss Japan of 1954, poses In Tokyo, Mieko Is looking for ward to her trip to Long Beach, Calif, where she'll compete for the "Miss Urn versa" title. Search Being Made Here For Heirs Of Estate A Chicago probate reseanch company is searching for the heirs to the estate of Ada (or Adele) Everhart, according to word re ceived today. Officials of W. C. Cox and Co., believe some of the children of Mrs. Everhart nec Hufstadcr, may be readers of The News Review. Mrs. Everhart resided in or near Cleveland, Ohio, about 1890 and subsequent years. Anyone having knowledge of members of her family should con tact the company, 208 S. LaSalle St., Chicago 4, 111. Wtuii Afnnflcrpr RiMia Tnti. betts of the Redlegs was a student at i-roviaence loiiege, ne was a regular on the basketball team. 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