0 o 0 o Riddle People At f end Meeting By ERMA BEST In Las Vegas, New, for a recent! mining convention were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mollard. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Coleman and Mr. and Mrs. E. i. Maney, aU of Riddle. Muting Atttnd.d Mrs. DarreU Carter and Mrs. Robert Pickell were in Portland last week to attend the meeting of the Cancer Society. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Hager and (our children of Coos Bay were re cent visitors at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hager, Following surgery in Eugene, the senior Kir. Hager is slowly recuperating from a crush ed leg, sustained in a woods acci dent last August. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Aikins and Miss Melba Aikins have returned from a successful hunting and fish ing trip in Uie Rogue river country. The Rev. Maurice Miller, pastor of the Riddle First Baptist Church, attended the Oregon State Baptist convention held recently in Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Rice Sr. and daughter were recent guests at the home of the Rice's son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Don ald Rice. Recent weekend guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wil liams were their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Williams, and two daughters, all of Portland. Frl Oct. 21, 1960 Th Nwi-Rview, Roieburg, Ore. 5 Vast New Source Of Power Opens With Columbia Treaty Agreement PORTLAND (AP) The Pacific Northwest and British Columbia will produce a vast new supply of hydroelectric power at low cost Bryden To Attend Loggers' Confab Oregon Loggers will be well rep resented at the Slst annual session of the Pacific Logging Congress which meets in Vancouver, B. C, Oct. 26-28 according to Carwin woouey, congress secretary. The group includes a Roseburg man. Clifford Bryden, of Roseburg Lum- Der uo. Robert F. Dwyer, Dwyer Lum ber and Plywood Co., Portland a past-president, and presently treasurer of the loggers' grou which is headed by president Wi liam McMahan, Canadian Forest Products, Ltd., Vancouver, B, C. Policy Goals Brice Hammock, Publishers Pa per Co., Oregon City, will discuss operating problems and long range policy goals of the forest industry on a panel "How Will Industry Meet the Challenge of the Back Forty?". Verne Davis, Crown Zel lerbach Corp.. Seaside, will present a slide talk "Contractor Cut and Yard Company Load and Haul", and V. V. Church, U. S. Forest Service, Portland, will talk on "Disposal of Right-of-way Slash by Chipping". Bryden is a member of the Con gress resolutions committee, and Dugan Pearl, Evans Products Co., Coos Bay, is the Oregon member of the nominating committee. Approximately 1500 loggers and 500 wives are expected to attend from the twelve western stales, British Columbia and Alaska.1 under terms of the treaty agree-,U. S. plants would run the cost ment announced Wednesday Dy 10 mis country to Sim million. the United States and Canada. Bcnnelt said one of the import- It mav even Dermit a cut in i ant aiiiipi nf etMtine 1 a r a p the present Bonneville Power Ad-! amounts of power quickly from ministration s wholesale raie ot Canadian storage was the time il $17.50 a kilowatt year, says Elmer j gave to look for a solution to the r , Bennett, undersecretary or me salmon problem. Interior and chief U. S. negotiator in the treaty talks. End To Floods Did this mean, he was asked that it now is not necessary for Ihe Federal Power Commission to And it promises an end to costly ; give an early decision on the corn- floods on the Columbia and the Kootenai. The agreement ended years of effort to find a common ground between the two countries for con- peling applications for High Moun tain Sheep and Nez Perce dams on the Snake? Bennett replied that the Interior Department's views on this would be transmitted One of the treaty provisions says that non-federal agencies may use the benefits of increased storage only through agreement with the federal agency. This agreement can be worked out, he said, on a flat price per kilowatt Births slruction of storage reservoirs in j shortly to the FPC. Canada to benefit downstream hydro plants in the United States, for development of the Kootenai River through Libby Dam, and to control floods. Under the agreement, Canada will build three storage dams, get ting High Arrow and Duncan into operation within live years, and Mica into operation in nine. Can ada and the U. S. will divide the extra power this will produce at the downstream locations, and the United States will deliver it to the Canadian line. U.S. To Build Dam The United States will build Libby Dam, getting it under way within five years. Canada will pay its landowners for loss of property submerged by the dam's reservoir and it will get full rights to the downstream benefits the dam pro duces in the Canadian stretch of the river. In all, the treaty calls for Can ada to provide 15.5 million acre feet of storage. Bennett said it is supposed that Canada actually will provide more but the excess will be planned for use in its own Mica Dam hvdro operation. When the United States built its dams on the Columbia there are six federal plant? now or being built from Grand Coulee to Bonne ville it constructed them so that they had 3'-j million kilowatts of SCOUT AIDE Eagle- Scout Kent L. Goering, 17, o Neo desha, . Kan., has been se lected as a junior scientific aide at Camp Century, built under Greenland's icecap 800 miles from the North Pole. He will assist in glaciology, meteorology and polar medi jcal projects at the atomic (powered community, return ing home next April. Mtrcy Hospital PARKS To Mr. and Mrs. Her man W. Parks, Box 563, Winston, Oct. 12, a son, Gregory Wayne; weight 8 plunds 9 ounces. JOHNSON To Mr. and Mrs. David Carl Johnson, 214 SE Hoov er St., Roseburg, Oct. 13, a son, Scott David; weight 6 pounds 4 ounces. BROCK To Mr. and Mrs. Car rol D. Brock, Box 556, Winston, Oct. 15, a daughter, Katherine Yvonne; weight 6 pounds bvt ounc- 6SL0VELAND To Mr. and Mrs. Lauren K. Loveland, 163 W. Car dinal St., Roseburg, Oct. 15, a son, Thomas William; weight 7 pounds 13 ounces. ABEL To Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Abel, 1729 NE Malheur, Rose, burg, Oct. 15, a son, Ronald Ger ard; weight 8 pounds 12Vi ounces. STEVENS To Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Stevens, 1007 SE Main, Roseburg, Oct. 17, a daughter, Vic ki Rae; weight 7 pounds 4Vi one- unused capacity. Additional Powtr Regulation of the river by the Canadian dams will allow much of this built-in capacity that now is idle to be turned to electric pro duction. As of 1970, Bennett said, this would mean 1.686,000 kilo watts of additional prime power to the U. S. and 763,000 to Canada. The difference comes in the U.S. getting all of Libby's 544.000 kilp-1 watts as well as some additional that could have been produced even without the Canadian stor age, i There will be more tnan tnis amount of power actually usable, ! Bennett said, since prime power is figured at minimum stream flow. Salable firm power, he said, will be over two million for the U. S. 5453 Million Cost Initial cost as of 1970 is esti mated at $453 million for the United States and $402.5 for Can ada. Bennett said that by 1985, ad ditional generating additions to year. MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Foreign Office announced that Soviet Premier Khrushchev will diverted from the Columhia Basin, I Columhia might divert from the , address a homecoming meeting in Khrushchev To Speak It also says water will not be ! ending U. S. fears that British Columbia into the Eraser River. 1 Luzhniki Stadium Thursday. C.S.I.O. 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