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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1955)
4 The Newi-Review, Roieburg, Ore. Mon., Nov. 21, 1955 barg, Orita, rWr cl r Mtrcfc t. Mil. CHARLES V. STANTON, Iditor nd Mn0r Mtmbtr f th Aitoeitd Prtis, Ortgon Ntwpapr Pjo(!shr Attoclarion, th Audit Burtiu of Circulation! priifliU kv WlftTHOLLIBAT CO.. INC., la Nt frk, Chlcaf Publiihtd Daily Ixcapt Sunday by Hi News-Review Company, Inc. It rranclic. 4if la. Ialtla. PrtUn4. Diartr UBtCBirTlUN AAlEtW-ln OrfftB Hy HiU-M Ir. HI M, til Moatkl, M lt Ibrat encRlka. U ttV OiC14 Or Mr Mail $ Taar, lMi ill vaatfcl. 17 M, ikrt nanlba. flat. Br Nawa-Kavlaw CarrUr Pf Taar, U.M (is advascai. Uh lhaa ft, pat naith. II U. Reformatory Has Another Head '.peter ct ion. In The Day's News GREAT RESPONSIBILITY Charles V. Stanton I'ublic interest in the heariiiK beinif held in the Pacific Northwest by a joint Senate-House committee inventitfatinir timber sales and management is demonstrated by the ex tensive coverage given by newspaiiers in the region. Nearly every daily paper in Oregon, despite crowded space conditions, has carried many columns of interpreta tive news prior to the coming of the committee. The actual hearings have been followed with great interest by all news papers, and suggestions to the committee are being report ed in detail. Headers of The Newt-Review were made acquainted with the issues through the fine series of articles by our staff writer, Chuck Crell. Both the Oreannimi and Jimrmd in Portland ran interpretative articles and editorial com ment for many days in advance of the hearings. The Reuix-ter-(!iwrd at Eugene, and many other papers similarly gave many columns to advance discussion of timber problems. Certainly newspapers would not have devoted so much space to the subject had there been no readership interest. Members of the committee undoubtedly are aware by this lime of the intense public concern in the various issues and the demand for solution to the many perplexing and complicated problems. No Room For Politics There have ieen heavy overtones of politics in the sev eral hearings. Members of the committee have declared their intention of making non-partisan investigation. H u t there has been considerable bickering between members. Manv questions put to witnesses have been leading in polit ical implication. j If the committee had a political intent when it started its series of hearings, it undoubtedly has been given am ple demonstration by the press and the public that the prob lems of this area are non-political in nature and should be given non-partisan appraisal. H is quite apparent from the testimony given the com- ! mittee that a most serious condition exists. We are in the: midst of a revolution in industrial operations and timber management. Radical changes must be made in our con cepts and practices. Right now we have a conflict between the old and the new. Our timber industry until recently has been based on the saw. The cutting of timbers and boards has been the predominating operation. But in recent years we have seen the coming of plywood, chip board, pulp and paper, and we now are entering an era of chemical utilization holding forth promise of usages far different than anything known before. Sustained Yield Barrier The industry also lias collided with a new concept, that of sustained yield forestry. Heretofore the industry has cut all the limber in sight in an operating area and then moved on to new fields, leav ing desolation and ghost towns. The sustained yield theory is comparatively new. It applies to federal timber lands only, Hut many larger concerns are adopting the idea for their own future operations and are establishing tree farms. In the future we will "farm" rather than "mine" our tim ber. But habits are not easy to change. The practices built up by the timber industry as it cut its way across the con inent still are in evidence. In the collision with sustained yield policies, a large segment of the industry, hungry for logs, still would cut-out and gel-out, if opportunity offered. Heavy pressures will be exerted to break down the sustain ed yield program. These pressures must be resisted at all costs. We should have a more realistic inventory, in which the full allowable cut possible under a sustained yield pro gram may be made available but jio more. We should have an access road system adequate to permit better man agement and the rapid disposal of overripe, mature a n d salvage timber. We should do everything possible to obtain the most complete utilization and eliminate waste. The committee investigating our forest problems has had placed upon its sJioulders a great burden and responsi bility. It can, if it will properly devote itself to the prob lems brought before it, do much to stabilize the industry, protect the public's interest in our national forests and grant lands, increase the general economy of the area, and, at the same time, provide a more profitable management activi ty for the federal government. These problems are not in the field of politics. "-Mai iBoJc NKW YORK ( .-VI AstroloKy has ivachtul its peak at last. II has jront' feline. They now have a book out on how your eat. too. is controlled by the stars. The book is failed "Horoscopes for Pu.tsy Cats," ami the author is huotsir ( ampbell. A note about the author savs "At the moment she is stretched Ins Cod or himself. ' People who believe in astrology out on a sunny window, tail curled I cannot help hut classify with around, contented and delighted those who have a blind confideu e everyone! with evervtlnni: and She is very special." What makes her so special'" A publisher friend of mine says Inn would describe any author he has ever known. I am kI;hJ to see this book on astrology for eat, published that picking up a toad will wive them warts and that if they leave a horse's hair in a bottle of water for six weeks it will turn into a snake. Hecently I puked up a Cleve land paper and was awiundeil to note it estimated that .'mono peo- For years I sobered from an !!!, .1 1. t- I. ') . pondered what to do to save them from themselves. Is there no philanthropic society willing to prooatMuda balloons into Cleveland and tell these lost ,SO. Oou souls about how wonderful life is in the outside world? Paganism is at least worth alters to cats, which, happily. I. was able to conquer. For manv more years, however. I have sttf lered from an allcrcy to people J(iat leryy, kuht it though I try, 1 can do not h inn about Kven the dictionary defines as trology as a "p.MMido science." and Unbiased Answer Asked In Sanitation Voting fJKKEN I live in the Green District and have observed with much interest the letter! from other residents, while it is my op inion that everyone of these letter writer is sincere there are so (many different opinions that per haps we cannot see the forest for j the trees. To those people who I maintain that progress is inevita- Kit, that Green will double its popu j lalion and health problems will re sult, may i suggest a realistic point of view? After the election; if dissolution is voted, they can work to establish a district where they feel sewers are needed. The people in Green who want a sewer are in the more densely populated areas and they ! have more problems than sewage. 1 ney bum on the lowlands, in most cases, and made no provision for draining the ram water. Haiti 1 will fall in Oregon nine months of the year and the lowlands water table will rise and that water that has no chance to drum away will become stagnant. Stagnant water smells if there are no septic tanks for miles. If the septic tanks on I Lin ne II Ave. drain directly onto the I school grounds as one writer stales, I those residents and those resi i dents are in favor of a sewer do i they not have themselves to blame 1 for that situation? Nor will a se I wer correct it, this is not a storm I sewer and no surface drainage will be taken care of thereby. It ; would seem that they need a drain age district. I As for the health hazard they 1 call possible, they seem to have as healthy children as in any com parable area anywhere. There is no medical evidence to support any I claim of typhoid, etc., resulting I from sewage disposal. Kven the I County Sanitarian has stated "The ' septic tank and subsurface dis posal field proved to be a satis factory method of water carried household sewage in rural areas. In urban developments the seolic I tank and subsurface disposal field 1 as a means of disposal of hoi is e I hold water carried sewage has , I proven to be a failure."' Perhaps , people who do not live in the Green District think it is a small town of some sort, out here. The Green Sanitary District boundaries as they exist certainly would be the oddest urban devel opment in history in the generally accepted usase of urban as pertain- j ing to a city or a town. In approxi mately 2000 acres, we understand are included m the district, they plan to sewer .144 homes and three mills. There are a few short streets and the homes on the old highway are reasonably close together. The rest of the area is undeveloped pasture land and homes on acre ages ranging from 1 to 25 acres. A sewer district in a town where people may have large lots, but not large pastures, certainly could be practical as lateral and mams are to lie assessed by the Toot and j the cost could lie paid for by many, manv people. The present proposed district boundaries make provision1 for a population density of 8 per- i sons per acre. At present time however, we do not have a popu-' latum of lfi.000 persons. I am sure' in M4 homes. If we did have this population a sewer certainly would lie feasible and the people who feel the opponents of the district are blocking progress would have a point. While it may constitute progress' to pave streets, put in sewers, fire! stations and all other convenience that are associated w ilh urban areas, the cost of those services to a rural area is prohibitive. If tlie, could be furnished to the residents of the Green area at anv where near the costs of a similar city installation. I do not think you would have had the letters for drs snlulion. tlf course everyone w ants wa ter, electricity, and phones but these conveniences are not the ex-1 pensive proposition that sewer (list-; nets and paved streets are to a community. We have Huberts Creek water, electricity, telephone,, septic tanks and the U.S. Govt, fur nishes us with mail service.. Hob-1 erts Creek water costs us .S0 00 for a hookup charge and the monthly charge according to how much water we use. Our electric rates are the same as any other Copco subscriber, (in,1 writer ask if we have those com emences and insinuates ih.it if we do not feel1 like obligating our community fori the cost of a sewer system that we are old-fashioned. I for one do not mind beim: r.illed that, but lets face the facts. This letter writer stales that he "does not have a septic tank and hopes that he will not have to put one in " We understand 1ns house is under const ruction and wonder what lie will do as 10 sewage dis posal since the earliest possible ; date of actual construction of the sewer 1.1 .tune litfti and no comple-; lion dale has even been estimated'.' j Lets all go tit the polls Nov, 112nd1 and give this 111 .Hter an unbiased answer. Mariorie Doyle Green, Ore. Protection Of Health Said Sewer Advantage GUKKN' An article that ap peared in The News Keview earli er this year convinced me that the proposed Green Sanitary District was a necessity to the health of my family and deserved my vote and lull cooperation. The article titled "llepat itus Most Prevalent Where Sewage Is Had" mtorm ed readers that intectious hepati-, us. a disease which frequently ap pears in areas where sewage dis posal is inadequate, is the only di sease show me a rapid increase in the state Dr Harold M F.rick son. Slate Health Olficer. said that iivemv vh m fu. v u"""uru w braska State Reformatory hai lit ' third superintendent of the year. 1 WASHINGTON (NEA) (Associated Press, and Edgar An- . He is Robert E. Nichols. 31. di- Three hundred Washineton corres- sell Mowrer the columnist, among seaboard and if asserting: I 277 cases an increase of 43 per rec,or of lne s,a,e Safety Patrol'i pondents who collaborated with I others, say today that in case Ei- ngni tor ail. cent-were reported in an area criminal laboratory, who wa ihis column on a political opinion I senhower is nor the Republican me lourtn character, c oined in - :',. . 1 ' 1 named to the nnst Eridav aftpr .H . i mA.Zn f thZ iqsji anH..Ii th. nnlv wav the GOP : a soiled smock, his hands, clasp- ni-di uidim loss id.11 year. 1111- yr'-."i' " w . r " " . ".' ' 1 V . " " in rust n.ii.nU i. Th r.... can win is 10 nominate nmi. - -"! u,vn.h v T.mmnnt iPtoran er. He is saving: Doluical writer who heads his own j "1 PAY FOR ALL." news bureau, qualities this opinion j proper sewage disposal also result- ne rtsiKnation of M. L. Wimber-, presidential election, came up with ed in an outbreak of typhoid in an lv- 49- uno had "een lpe"ntend 1 a number of shrewd observations area near Klamath Falls. Dr. Er- i em;, s,nce, SePL , 8-, . , on the situation today. Also, they ir-ifn ta id ihm mikivi. .li..i .r. Wimoerly had taken the post 1 vulunteered some eood. earlv win fr in r... .r...rwi .(i iv,- after the State Board of Control ter bnnk heitinir add on the dossi-I with the observation that "Warren 1 H-m-m m-m! slate s most critical health prob- fired eore Morns, superintend- ble outcome. 'j wouldn't leave a sure life job un-! in these closing days of the year Jem enl for e'"nl years. The job pays por jnslace Richard Harkness llJiJ' ni chances of victory were 1955, with the campaign year of Thij article disturbed me. I tel-1; a 'ar nd maintenance. of NBC make; an estimate of one-1 very bright " 1356 coming up it sounds like po- ephoned the counlv health officer MoT,s ,wa 'smKsed for m-.t five wi(is tnal pre,ident Eisen-i Wi"''" A. Garrett of Gannett ; iltical propaganda, doesn t it? and asked just how serious our shor'lination after he had lev n(mer W1l be a candidate for re-j newspapers thinks that Republi-, situation was in Green. I was in- eral.t,m" cntl,c,"a the board for eectlon Thit ig probably a prettv I can and Democratic chances of ic-1 0ne can-t he, wondering if hv formed that the community was. "s hand,m, twoIn(ota ! tne good bet, either wav. It is confirm I lrv today are just 50-50 an even chance these drawings might to use his words, ' sitting on aila,,e f n.ltentiary- l Mr ed by the poll result which shows I money bet. 1 his is probably a fair be aillhenttc antlqiU.s. powder keg of disease and no one ' nad Put, down an uprising at the g2 cenPt o( tne Washington 1 average, estimate of Washington W SOt it wouid indicate that away can predict when it will explode." reformatory, jerking more than s and ra(jjo reporleri believing i reportorial opinion as of now. bat.k ,here in ,nose ear)ier centur. "I he plumbing and septic tank '?,'r. ffUi- that Ike will not 7un. ' Oould Lincoln of Washington tne pohticians handlcd lne system on our property are in pipping them and putting .them- . nt .lh lh- Star, dean of all political writers farmer inK a.most the idcnlica, good working order. But the '"'V,'" V m the United Mates, thinks now; in which the politicians ground wherethe field lines drain 7 ? Tr8 VflrHUr vTeTZr undertaking to handle h.m iid 'un-u w.e haiuiauon point. c . Nixon for the presidency, Arthur Our sewajie disposal system can-: ; , jd h quitting 1 rock of the New York Times puts not improve: it wd on v uei worse 1 . :,eriy !'d,u. "e WdS. u.in .u. j.i. , r,, th.t vivnn Of all the DeoDiP 1 havm laikpH ,he retormatory because "l didn t in, ""U3 BI l" "- vi ai me people 1 nae talked . . .. . . . w,n be the nominee. with about the proposed sewer-1 yi 1 worR MR. KROCK MAKES UtAK that any political opinion express ed now is "pure speculation" this far ahead of election day. But in the realm of speculation on the question of whether Chief Justice Karl Warren win consent 10 ac age system, no one has denied that it is needed in this commit-111 C A ;nily. It is my opinion that thejU. 3. MnnOUnCCS problem is more critical than the n . , I water problem before the Roberts 1 KaCf LllSOFI .Creek Water District was formed. IThen we were troubled with the, ,.. . r..,.,,,., , i inconvenience of hauling water. 1 812"', announced T ! ,he OP presidential nomina :Now we face disease. i ?: i (1 ' aynnl,.n"" ii:ion"M ! tion in case Eisenhower does not Alter we acknowledged that- thi . n.ii ou j n.. run. the Times columnist onserv now. That is to sav: THEY FIRST MADE HIM FEEL SORRY FOR HIMSELF. j with the five-nation Baghdad Pact jin the Middle hast. .prove the sewaee disposal condi- Ti. . .-!. Idark shadow. tton in our neighborhood, the first ,, r t:. i uhr, Kirn.it nf the Christian ,h wntrfl lr. Irnnur il Ihp . "u di nam , :." ""V 1 Mi. cost to us as individual homeown ers. We studied the engineer's re- Stevenson and Kefauver. the Re publican ticket Nixon and Rep. Charlie Halleck of Indiana. A ma jority of the correspondents re porting in this poll agree with Lin- GETTING INTO SOME REALLY iously interesting little story, It long odds, Rus Tornabene of NBC ; tells of an elderly recluse who liv serves as spokesman for a dozen ; ed in a bare little room in a ram or more anonymous correspond-j shackle hotel in Los Angeles and was oeuevca ie oe an 01a age pensioner. He was found dead and after his death it was discovered that he was the owner of 1.050 shares of U.S. Steel stock, worth at current market prices more than $110,000. ents reporting in the poll.' They be lieve that the itepuDiican presiden tial team will be made up of two dark horses candidates whose names aren't yet prominent in speculation. Ton manv Washington corres pondents will remember how soutnwestern Doundanes in the 1 cnaeison m ousiwu n- " 4 man upset tne uewey appie can. lwl.)1 L-.t nnA Uoi-bahira PvpninP Fade. A. - j .f . ...,l,t nnl nn port nd .llonded several ml. "'Tl 'nheH st.i h.. I.Hi,.i L Davis o Buffalo News, Ca-, I, . li mh" I kV ih i ain. ings of the Green Sanitary Dis-j :t j.. '.!. . u.M Iki1i;n f Vu Vnrk Times I tr.ct and tins what we learn- u,i!.Vi-',ui,i , j : 3r ,.J.r. ihink lhat . 1 jii nut mi mm wiir. i nc m IIIIUIHII o'"i '" " - . lu ;menl also said U.S. observers are Warren would run if President fciv There are five charges. Num- being sent to the pact nation's senhower insisted, or if GOP draft ber one ?,o fur Orangeburg 1 first meetme at Haehdad nn nn. ed him. ! 11 p.- iu vxivnn uum me wnci uui-, aay. Even as neutra an otiserver as, - . f rt of our house to our property; -The United States hopes that Henrv Brandon of Undon Times, FnH Tft UlSDerS3l line. Number two S75. at $2S a'tli m.u r,.ani,ailnr. ..Mil ,i-. .nM ho rimfipd! " month, for a service connection I increasing strength enablinc it In anH wnulH aerent a draft. : CL T- DliMfe 11 r ik- r. . " . , ".. . . M r ?a 1 ucici ac lama This cuts down on the number will ing to make a prediction. Directive Puts He was a poor citizen, you say? I'm afraid I'll have to disagree with you. in these modern indus trial days, when huge aggrega tions of capital are needed to carry on the huge modern business of modern living, he was a GOOD citizen. He saved up his money and in vested it in shares of one of our big modern industrial enterprises. Thus he helped to provide jobs for all nf n r. 11.11 1 .. i r 1 x b iniiiij -- iiiniii 11 ntifnivi nnrruita ' ha main lo our property line and the; Designated as observer, at Mon- aging editor of Washington Host WASHINGTON i A Pentagon1 He was quite different from the jo nidigv i.s nit: ...dine lor evt-iy day s meeting were Waldemar ana limes neraiu. nmiin (airecuve nas pui an euu iu me : j , r T noun ruiiiiecii'u in me sewer. : (,alman. L". Niiinber three S.1.VI a month :Adm John sewer service charge. This money commander in the Mediterranean, ! Courier Journal. Roger Greene of plants. meeting were Waldemar and Times Herald. William H. , directive has put an end to the miser nuaras up nisrasn.no n. L.S ambassador lo Iraq I Stringer of Christian Science Mon-;ong discussed plan to insist upon, hides it in a tin can - or caches ohnll Cas'adj -US Navy Utor, Ed Edstrom of Umitville I maximum dispersal of defense i ; .away in a safe deposit box in mler in the Mediterranean. 1 Courier Journal. Roger Greene of plants. i ln?. v?ults Dank- . will help pay for the disposal plant, land Brig Gen. Forrest Caraway.! pumping stations and yearly op- The Stale Deportment named; - . r D.:.:- eralion. Number four S11S25 in.nallman to maintain the United 1 tuna KaiSing cash or in 20 semiannual payments states' political link with the pact. Drives Draw Criticism Kririav's Defense Department di rective recognized that the objec tive should be to "avoid the ten dency toward over-concentration" of critical - defense facilities in a duct assessment at 1', cents i PORTLAND Jf Scheduled fund bunched up target areas. But it per square foot. The money will $5,000 Monthly Income rajsjn. ,irjves by the United also recognized "the obstacles to finance the sewer laterals. We del i .if p i l I -,J, ! r.rhral Palsv Assn and the! maximum dispersal." listing terimncd the amount we will payi"" Bv Labor DvatroDhv Assn drew amon ihfm cosl- social disloca- on this charge by multiplying .,., .. s.. . I JzJttWL. f?:..lreS ! lion in existing areas of papula- cents times the square footage of , T V;"'"-;"' 7" 3 " - and the possibility of delay ancient political device nf MAKING S3 by 150. Our lot actually mea- , pres dent emeritus o the , the for land Ji"", Fn.d- I in production ol vital equipment. VS FEEL, SORRY FOR OUR. sores r,i Uv i iii; r knt Hip i ift.fnni 1 At L teamsters, left his wife a. The drives were labeled as un-( . j 7L ici.wirc .lenlh "s the maximum In be fl I ss- '""n'my minimum income I necessary and unwarranted" by I . The order instructed the serv- SELVES. 2" v?. " It , .? 1 in a will filed for probate Fnriav. th. directors, who asked the Port-1 icea to consider dispersal a "key He harps on their bigness, know- This i the increase in oiiriiroo-1 The 8:1 ear-old labor leader's and City Council to "find out faclor ln lhe 'election ol aoai- ing that almost , ri , Liii. ,l? lnV.TH personal estate was valued at SKO.-i accurately what these two parti- llonal source of supply whenlnings of time t r tax with the proposed b-m.ll , , , , accurately what P LOT tha one source is available I been jealous of He kept his money at work. In the modern world, monev must be KEPT AT WORK if we are all to prosper. Getting back to the politicians Our immense modern business corporations are favorite targets of the type of two-bit politician who seeks lo win our voles by tne ured. Number five S7.02 a vear. the little man has the bigger man. ,ip i;,i ... h;;;,'n;,r ; ,Vjcu,ar Tl n! w ."u ! i!n, be devtlooed. .... old dodie. but a very ef- i . . u. ... U.,..v n.iirn ann wnprn inc. mnnpv win . . i ins is wnai mese ue cnarjjes tives and ehtireh eronns . .... : ' Pnrmer Air Forre Serretarv : fective one. The directors said both organiza- mean lo us. We will huv Orantie-i At ih time nf hi. .'in-iv, 1)e..spe"1 K to our Vm line. wilanJu. ,abr7 , "tired fci '" invited to apply for will do most. If not.!!, of thejo? th union "e.ded f.f" j "T?" urT , iiiK (nn.Mivf?t, iimi 11 win vom years. o..t ... ahuut Sao, or 'Mi rents a foot, ac- Th nmhatm niiiinn n.uaiA A snokesman for the muscul cordintf to the nhimhins supply, the monthly income would come ' dystrophy organization said the' Calif., area in particular, feared hmises of Hosemiru. I hen we will j 0ut of a trust fund of undisclosed ' association had not joined United i at that time that its huge aircraft pay $75 for service connection. ! sie and not included in the SHU.-i Fund because it was believed lhaL industry would be hurt bv anv de- Ihufte two expenses wont comeiooo estimate of the personal en-1 a separate campaign would pro- tor mined defense move to carry up aKatn. They are completely tate. I vide wider education of the public. Lout dispersal policies. Harold E. Talbott some months ago arous?d criticism on the Pa cific Coast when he said that sec ond sources for new aircraft pro rinMinn thnnlri be established in A spokesman tor tne muscular , the interior. The Us Antjeles. pa id fur. Once a mont h we w pay our sewer service charge just as we pay our water bill. Twice a year we will pay $5.Wi plus 6 per cent interest until we have made the final 20th payment. In November, we will receive our tax statement, which will show an in crease of $7.12 in taxes. There are many small children in our neighborhood who play in their back yards. I firmly believe none of the parents would hesi tate to choose between the ex pense of an adequate sewage dis posal system or the expense in money and heartache of nursing a sick child back to health from some terrible disease. Yes indeed, we can afford In , -vote for the Green Sanitary District. Mrs. Glynn Johnsoa tlreen. Ore. Self-service GARAGE 404 West Lane St. OR21502 or OR 3-4819 Man Convicted For Second Time Tl'SCAI.OOSA, Ala. James r.udwm Cnlun is under conviction for the second time in the slaying of his I'niverMty of Alabama room maie in 1 ;.' I but the defense has aniiouiK-cd it aain will appeal the verdict. A Circuit Court jury Sunday found the Lincoln. Ala., man piulty of serwiul decree murder in the Kasler Sunday shooting of Luther Jerome Vcazey of lireenville. Miss, t'olvin was sentenced to 10 years in prison and was placed in the Tuscaloosa County jail. Col in u as convic:ed of second decree murder at the first trial and sentenced to S years. The verdict was thrown out when his lawyers appealed the case. Col in testified at last week's trial that his roommate had threat ened to kill him and was advancing on him with a knife when he fired in self-defense, Testimony was that the shooting followed a drinking party and a )ii;hl between Colvm and Veazey at the apartment where they lived. the diclionarv Usuallv has a nice Pniiosopnic consideration, but is- w.uil for evei-vlbm' I lie ulna ili.it lll'" -never! people aetuallv bchev e ev ents rail b ,i re emit rolled by tie posi tion of the siar.-t and planets thor oughly depresses me with the fu ture of (he human race When I see a man who attends rlniiTh Moving an astrology mag, For humans, that is A cat shouldn't hint it loo hard lo be lieve m astrology. After all. a cat doesn't believe in people, so it has to believe in something. The volume at hand. "Horo scopes for Vussv Cats," offers this me 1 ran t help wondering who sound uarmns lo cau horn under he is trying to make a fool of - (he siitn of Aries, from March :i to April 19 I "You are susceptible to head aches and weakness of ibe kid neys. lon't eat loo much catnip or you may softer from a hang over. Take more milk " Perhaps ihi is a hidden warn ing to the M ooo astrology fan in Clev eland. ho knows ' Once you believe in astrology what can you be sure of Senate Committee Sets Red Activity Hearing WASHINGTON f The Senate internal security subcommittee w.i reported Saturday to be plan ning closed hearings in New York next week on Communist activi ties. A source close to the committee saul one purpoe will he to follow up leads developed in hearings lat Julv at which a number of new spa per and radio representa tives were umiees. DISNEY THEME CHOSEN roKTI.ANP f - "Oisnevland tn Mowers" wd! he the theme of the Portland Hose Festival. June ti lit Walt Ibsney Productions, lne . of Holivwood. will assist in designing, float . decorations and settings .mil will provide star from the firm's film and television productions. N VOTES What Will Our Proposed Sewer District Cost YOU? BASED ON ENGINEERING FEASABILITY SURVEY Example Cost of $10,000 Home on lOO'x.50' Lot: DIRECT ASSESSMENT FRONTAGE 100 Ft. TIMES MAXIMUM DEPTH 150 Ft. 15,000 sq. ft. TIMES He PER SQUARE FOOT .011 TftTAI Poyabla in 20 tsmi-annual Q?? I V 1 I" payment? par Bancroft Band JLmLaJ Plus Hook-Up Charge $ 75 Plut 6-mi II additional taxw baicd on a(- t 1 9 tested valuation of property $12 per year. 4 TOTAL $312 Nominal individual horn hook-up cott from Koun to property lint and a terviee charge of 3.50 per month . . . IS THIS TOO MUCH TO PAY FOR THE FOLLOWING FUTURE BENEFITS? NO SURFACE SEWAGE HEALTHY PLAYGROUNDS FOR CHILDREN MORE FRESH COUNTRY AIR 4. FASTER COMMUNITY GROWTH 5. NO LOAN RESTRICTIONS FOR SANITARY REASONS 6. INCREASED RESALE VALUE OF PROPERTY VOTE FOR THE SEWER TOMORROW! PAID ADV. Gr.n Commute, fr Scv.,r, loll Hamm. CHrmn. !