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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1961)
o The Dalles Dam Said Beneficial To Salmon Run By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fishermen consider big dams Ihe enemies of fish. The Dalles Dam is different. Since The Dalles Dam went into operation, thousands more fish have gone up the Columbia River. Take the most valuable of all the fish in the Columbia the spring Chinook salmon. In the three years before The Dalles Dam went into operation late in 1956, about 100,000 Chinook got as far upstream as McNary Dam. In the three years thereafter, 225.000 spring Chinook swam past ilcNary. A Fish biologists say it is because The Dalles Dam flooded Indian fishing points and commercial fishing was closed when The Dalles Dam was completed. Before the dam was built, the fish were forced into narrow pas sages through the rock rapids at Ceiilo. Indians, standing on the rocks, used to scoop' out thousands of fish in dip nets. All this now is deep beneath the surface of the pool behind The Dalles Dam. Coin- nic.'cial fishing above Bonneville Dam also ended when the dam was completed. Army Engineers say the spring Chinook run this year totaled nearly 100,000 at Bonneville Dam, downstream from The Dalles. Seven per cent of them went on past The Dalles and .McNary dams. In the years just before the dam was completed, only 27 per cent of the spring Chinook were able to get past Celuo and up to Mc Nary. Since the dam has been com pleted 440.000 spring Chinook have been counted at Bonneville. At AlcNary the count has been 350. 000. That means 79 per cent of the fish got upstream. The records are similar for fall Chinook and steelhead, said Phil bin F. Aloon, chief of the district fish planning section for the Army Engineers. Sheep Feeder Sale Slated The Douglas County Livestock Association will sponsor a sheep feeder sale July 22, it was an nounced today by Wayne Mosher, secretary. Plans were completed at a com mittee meeting Tuesday night and details will be mailed to sheepmen in the county in a few days. The sale will take place at the Douglas Livestock Market at Wil bur, using their facilities. Lambs will be sorted into uniform classes for sale on an auction basis. Mosher emphasized that owners must have lambs in by 10 a.m. PST the date of the sale. Receiv ing will be from 5:30 to 10 a.m. It is to the owner's advantage to bring his lambs early since they will be sorted and weighed imme diately. Those received near dead line time would have to take the chance of "shrinkage." Anyone desiring to participate in the sale should contact the secre tary at PO Box 1165, Roseburg. Hot Weather Hurts Oregon's Pea Crop PENDLETON (AP) Umatilla County green pea processors have completed, or are ncaring com pletion of their season's opera 'ions, most of them on a bleak . jote. ) Some say the present crop is the poorest since they began grow ing peas. Others say 1955 was worse. Extremely hot weather is blamed. Extreme temperatures in June particularly hurt the crop. It knocked the blooms off and liter ally cooked the peas in the pod. For four consecutive days in the middle of June the mercury was above 100 degrees. Ninety degrees is considered the breaking point for peas. One processor, appar ently hardest hit, said the yield probably would be 40 per cent less than anticipated at the season's beginning. Multnomah Leaders Rapped By Hatfield SALEM (AP) Gov. Mark O. Hatfield said today that the Mult nomah County commissioners' have given a "horrible example of playing politics with the misery of people." He denied their charges that food standards have to be cut in the county and that the foster care program for children is in jeop ardv. i do not favor cutting food standards," he said. "Nobody will go hungry. If Multnomah County had moved ahead with the food surplus plan, there would be no problem." He said the county could take advantage of a new legislative act allowing welfare money to be transferred from one category to another. "The state Welfare Commission is working closely with the Mult nomah County Welfare Commis sion." he said, "there is close harmony." As to the foster care program, he said, "no child will go neg lected or turned into the streets. That is a false and malicious statement. " 4 A - J Eichmann Says Slaying Of Jews Was A 'Hideous, Heinous Crime' Thur., July 13, 1961 The Ncwj-Rev)iew, Roseburg, Or. 3 "JIM" WATTS IS AN HONORARY LT. GOV., only today it's Col. James K. Watts in stead of "Jim." Watts, right above, is o former athletic cooch and principal at Rose burg Seniojr High. He now is provost marshall at Fort Sam Houston, Tex. With Cpt. Henry C. Thompson (left) commanding officer 85th military police, Watts recently re ceived appointment as an honorary lieutenant governor of the State of Oklahoma for the part they play in U. S. Military preparedness. Col, Watts entered military service in 1934. (U. S.- Army Photo) Heavy Flow Stepped-Up BERLIN (AP) Chancellor Kon rad Adenauer said today the heavy flow of refugees into West Berlin indicates the Communist East Germany regime was step ping up pressure on its citizens. "The refugee situation proves that conditions over there have become unbearable, the West German leader told a news con ference. "A panic seems to have broken out." ' Refugees Cross Easily Refugees now cross easily from East Berlin to West Berlin and are flown to West Germany. So viet threats to hand over more authority to East Germany have encouraged the Red regime there to demand control over air cor ridors to West Berlin. This would close the refugee escape hatch. West Berlin is 100 miles inside East Germany. Within East Germany the ten sion over Berlin has brought a stepped-up campaign to make people support communism more actively. Party members are urged to do more grass-roots or ganization work. These organizing efforts, plus food shortages of such staples as potatoes and butter appear to be major causes for refugee flight. New Controls Imposed The Communists imposed new controls in East Berlin again to day to stop the drain on their sagging economy. West Berliners hereafter can obtain services in Of Refugees Indicates Pressure In E. Berlin East Berlin only by changing their marks, on a one-for-one ba sis. A Western mark is worth 4.62 East marks in West Berlin. West Berliners have been taking advantage of the cheap East Ger man money by getting haircuts, laundry service and the like in East Berlin. Adenauer held the news confer ence at the close of a two-day stay in Berlin, his first visit to the iso lated city in 18 months. He then flew through rainy weather back to .Bonn in a U.S. Air Force plane. West German planes are not per mitted in the corridors over East Germany. Adenauer rejected direct nego tialion between West Germany and Communist East Germanv, as urged by Soviet Premier Khrushchev. He also turned down again West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt's suggestion for a 52-na- tion conference on Germanv r. ade up ,of Germany's wartime enemies. The chancellor said again that a German settlement must be based on self-determination of the entir German people. He complimented Secretary of State Dean Rusk for setting "a pattern of restraint" in the Berlin negotiations. JERUSALEM (AP) Adolf! Eichmann. clinging grimly to his honor as an SS otticer. retusod today to admit that anv Nazi who! killed Jews was a criminal. I The former Gestapo colonel. would only concede that the slaughter of six million Jews he is charged with helping to adminis ter was "heinous, hideous." Israel Ally. Gen. Gideon Hans ner cracked Eichmann's aplomb again alter four days of blistering cross-examination. He extracted a flood of justifications on how a man could follow Hitler's murder ous orders and still live with him self. In sum, Eichmann's explana tion was that no matter how hor rible, orders had to be followed because of the SS oaths of loyal ty. Eichmann Shaken Finally sbaken, Eichmann begged the Israeli court regard less of his sentence to permit him to write a book on the pogrom "as a deterrent to the generations to come." It was an outright plea for his life. Presiding Judge Moslie Landau sternly rebuked Eichmann and told him that regardless of what he would write in such a book. "You will have to say it first here." The prosecution assault had Eichmann leaping to his feet and firing back his replies. The court room audience erupted in such frequent outbursts that the court threatened to eject the spectators. The SS oath, Eichmann pointed out, was: "My honor means loyalty." "All of us were members of Ihe same order bound to the Reichs Fuelirer (Hitler) by oalh." he said. "I regard violation of lovaltv as the greatest crime a man can perpetrate." "Greater 'than murdering, six million people?" Hausner shouted. "No, of course not. 'I was not dealing with extermination. Had I been ordered to do so 1 would have 'shot myself," he said. Most Hideous Crime When finally ordered to come out with his views, Eichmann faced the court, squared his shoulders and declared he recog nized the pogrom as "one of the most hideous, heinous, crimes in the history of mankind." But, he said, he did not have "as much as a little finger" in a Gestapo order for his own deputy to deliver poison gas to the exter mination camps.. Hausner slashed at Eichmann with evidence that 'his deputy, Rolf Guenlher, operated in con junction with the special "Cyklon B" gas developed for the slaugh ter. The prosecutor confronted Eich mann wilh his pretrial interroga tion in which he said he discov ered what Guenlher was doing and that he railed at him: "How am I to explain this to the head of my office. He will send me to hell." Said Eichmann: "It is clearly obvious that my mind at that time was a welter "of cbnfusion." Then he added that his chief, Gen. Heinrich Mueller, must have assigned Gucnther behind his back. CHURCH BUILDING SCHOOL WOOSTER. Ohio (AP) A Men nonite educational center, includ ing the sect's first high school in Ohio, is rising on a 30-acre cam pus about 50 miles south of Cleve land. The high school will open this fall. Plans call eventually for a junior college. The Mennonites have several elementary schools in Ohio. Mennonites came to Ohio from Switzerland, Alsace and Germany almost 150 years tgo. Basic be liefs in the sect include simplicity in life and worship, lundamental- ism and conscientious objection to military service. Hospital News Visiting Hours I to 3:30 D.m. and 7 to S p.m. Douglas Community Hospital Admitted Medical: Mrs. Charles Dean, Harold Baxter, Robert Gibson, Roseburg; Mrs. Carl Smith. Myr tle Creek; Mrs. Arthur Kuntz, Sutherlin: Mrs. Richard Lowell, Cottage Grove. Surgery: Mrs. Garry Heichel, Mrs. Vera Vestal, Mrs. Alexander Kennedy, Floyd Bodfield, Rose burg; Mrs. James McCool, Dil lard; Mrs. Gertrude Zogg, Glide. Discharged Mrs. Irvin Carlton, Carl C. Hill, Roland Reed, Andrea VanAllen, Mrs. Lundy Jarvis, Roseburg: Al lan Kytola, Wilbur; Mrs. Arthur Arms, Mrs. Bob Fullon, Mrs. Sher rell Mosby and daughter, Twanna Janeen, Winston; Mrs. Richard Frock, Florence; Mrs. Willis Crump, Sutherlin. Mercy Hospital Admitted Medical: Mrs. Marion Evans, . Mrs. Leon Dupper, Roseburg;' James Hahn, Tenmile; Henry Franks, Winchester; Tammy Bak er. Winston. Surgery: Mrs. Hale Hohnstein, Roseburg; Hershel Killian, Suther lin. Discharged Janice Boyle. Kalhy Johnson", Earl Arehart, Estel Paris. M r s. Holland Davis and son, Bradley j Duane. Roseburg; Mrs. Ralph Bicknell, .Mrs. Vincent Dykeman and daughter, Katrina Ann, Win ston; Berdett Harvey, Sutherlin. Oregon's accidental death rale for the past two years was 62 9 per ino.ooo population, compared to a national rale of 16. High County Lakes Get Many Visitors The Diamond Lake District had the expected heavy recreation use i over the recent four-day holiday, 1 reports Mis. Arthur Sclby, Glide i correspondent. I The peak day was July 2. wilh a ! total of 4.740 people in the district. jThe tolal for all four days was ' 15.330. It is estimated that the av terage visitor stays two days, I which results in 7.6S5 people visit ; in? the area over the holiday, i The greatest concentration of ' population was at the Diamond Lake camp ground and other ar i eas adjacent to the lake, although Lemolo Lake and other areas in j the district were also very popular over the holiday. S On July 2. the U.S. Forest Service counted 1.250 cars and 410 trailers in the district, according to Donald J. Tandy, district ranger. IPenney's 0" Km t:,' V TERRIFIC BUY ON MEN'S SWIM SUITS King Neptune never had it so good as you in these action-fit Penney briefs. Firm ocerate-cotton-rubber lastex shark skin. Value priced! small, medium, largo 222 SHARP VALUES ON BOYS' SWIM SUITS Handsome classic boxer for 1 all the boys! Precisely tailor- y ed in fine cotton poplin prints. Sixes 4 to 8 Siiei 10 to 18 1.22 Spaghetti Folding Lawn Furniture """1200 Tubular aluminum frame. Vinyl tubular carding Cho wW FOLDING CHAIR 1 Qoo 4k6 webbing, poly two-tone. Tubular alum. from. 24 INCH BRAZIER L AQ Copper two-tone finish. 1 only WlWW 24 inch Deluxe Barbeque 1 Q flfi With hood, spit and motor. 1 only I Wl V V 24" Dlx; Cone Hood Barbeque . 77 All Yellow and block. 1 only u JbAlUV . 25.00 Deluxe Barbeque Wagon 'Blue ond grey. 1 only ft,' . I , H " i 1 i . . . ... -i 1 V HANGED IN EFFIGY It once was coaches. Now it's weighmasters who were hanged in effigy. Glendale weigh master Claude Humphreys was greeted with this sight this week wheri he came to work. It had been raised by unidentified persons, apparently in protest to his closing a Cow Creek swimming hole on property he owns because of Vandalism. A hand-printed badge or) the dummy reads "Clod, Ruiner of Recreation." (G. B. Fox Photo) Penney's wmmm (4Hevi Again '" BACU TO SCHOOL 1 cottons m m- AT BIG fi fm SAVINGS! i 1 PERCALE PRINTS 4 I00 Fine quality cotton percale in colorful prints and solids. Just great for dresses, aprons, and home decorating. AUTUMN COTTONS Colorful prints for late sum mer into fa) I. Find crease re sistant, woven textured, and lots more. 3 m-1 00 REGULATED COTTONS i v Penneys own regulated cotton with fine finish that makes up so beautifully and wears so well. 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