1
I
Stccloo TpS.
Acct. Haw ot Ovntr and or or
Ho. Deecrtptlon of Property Lot Block
J5M1-3 llrchfleld, J D & Nevatt
elude It Ft 9 7
Tus Lot Ml-3
B.VM Teer Tare! Interest Toul
1957-58
19SJ-59
1959- 60
1960- 61
( 1.77 J S.10
10.69 57.17
7.J1 56.02
3.15 48 .15
i 146.52 $ 22.92 $ 169. 44
6.33
46.48
48.71
45.00
85542-2 CUbert, Madeline A
Ta Lot 542-2
M&i Vol 176 pi 459 D
86018-1 . Hayee, A lei & KUdrtd U
Clerlei
Tax Lot 018-1
3)
Ft 7
1957- 58
1958- 59
1959- 60
1960- 61
1957- 58
1958- 59
1959- 60
1960- 61
101.85 31.57 133.42
92.09 21.18 113.27
110.28 16.54 126.82
101.88 7.13 109.01
406.10 $ 76.42 F"482.52
46.66
45.43
48.90
42.74
$ 183.73
14.46
10.45
7.34
2.99
61.12
55.88
56.24
45.73
$ 35.24 S 218.97
' Date at Flnt Publication: April 20 1962
Date of Lot Publication: May la 1962
IRA C. BYRD
Sheriff and Tax Collector for Douglae
County. Oregon
AVERY W. THOMPSON
District Attorney - Attorney for Plaintiff
United Slates Ranger 4 Moon Shot
Uses Back Door Of Old Mr. Moon
By ALTON BLAKESLEE
Associated Prtis Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - For the
seeonu time, ths moon received a
visitor from earth.
Soviet scientists made the first
contact 31 months ago at two
minutes after midnight, Moscow
time, on Sept. 14, 1959 with Lunik
II. Their 860-pound capsule plowed
into the side of the moon's face
which is always pointed toward
earth.
Ranger 4, the 730-pound U.S.
moon messenger, swung in today
by the back door. Tugged in by
the moon's gravity, it landed
somewhere on the moon's hidden,
or back, side.
One day, men from earth per
haps will inspect the splashes
raised in the moondust by the two
space capsules. The United
States is going all-out to land men
on the moon as early as 1968. The
Soviet Union possibly is aiming
for the same goal. There are pos
sibilities the two nations may join
hands in that costly and venture
some effort.
Welfare Director
Names Assistant
SALEM (AP) Geraldine Derby
was named assistant state public
welfare administrator Wednesday
Welfare Administrator Andrew
F. Juras said the appointment of
Mrs. Derby is effective May 1.
Mrs. Derby moves into the post
that has been vacant since Juras
moved up to administrator last
year.
Juras said Mrs. Derby will have
administrative responsibility for
program services of the agency in
the areas of public assistance
child welfare, administrative field
services and staff development.
Since May, 1953, Mrs. Derby has
been the director of public assist
ance for the state commission. She
currently is a West Coast regional
director of the American Public
Welfare Association.
Mrs. Derby started as a case
worker in Multnomah County in
1939 and in 1942 became a county
public welfare administrator. She
has been administrator for Gilli
am. Crook, Jefferson and Linn
counties.
She joined the stale Public Wel
fare Commission staff in 1944. She
was vice chairman of the Oregon
chapter of the National Associa
tion of Social Workers and is
chairman of the governor's com
mittee on home safety.
Ranger 4 and L'-nik II probably
disintegrated in molten explosions
as they smacked into the moon
at speeds of 6.000 miles per hour.
Aside from that, tney were re
spectful guests, in making no
noise. For the moon has no air
to conduct the sound of their impacts.
The Soviet Union opened the
space age reach to the moon with
a spaceship which missed the
moon by 4,700 miles early in Janu
ary 1959, and then sailed far be
yond to become a tiny man-made
planet of the sun.
With perfect aim, the Soviets hit
the moon eight months later with
Lunik II, emblazoned with the
hammer-and-sickle emblem and
an inscription reading "Union of
the Soviet Socialist Republics."
In October 1959, the Soviets sent
out Lunik III which caught a good
look at the hidden side of the
mbon, and transmitted television
pictures back to earth before the
spacecraft burned up in the
earth's atmosphere.
Those pictures showed moun
tains and valleys and plains or
"seas" similar to those on the vis
ible face of the moon.
The U.S. Pioneer IV, launched
March 3, 1959, came close to the
moon, before it wandered off to
become a man-made prisoner of
the sun. Ranger III, shot up last
Jan. 26, missed by many thou
sands of miles and also now is
circling the sun.
Ranger 4 failed in its primary
missions, including taking TV pic
tures of the moon minutes before
it slammed to destruction.
But somewhere now it has
gouged its signature of U.S. inten
tions to send human explorers to
the moon.
Officers Probe
Whereabouts
Of Diaz-Infante
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A self
styled Mexican revolutionary is
in jail -vhile probation officers
ponder his past whereabouts.
Marcantonio Diaz-Infante, 39,
was arrested on a probation vio
lation charge Wednesday while he
was in court avaiting a hearing on
a grand theft charge.
Diaz-Infante, who calls himself
the leader of the "Zapata move
ment," to overthrow the Mexican
government, was accused of vio
lating terms of probation granted
him 14 years ago in a grand theft
case.
Police said he wasn't supposed
to leave the Los Angeles area
without permission of probation
officers. A judge said that reports
of Diaz-Infante's appearances in
New York and Washington on be
half of his insurgent group indi
cated that he had violated proba
tion. Diaz-Infante, a suave, handsome
man, was taken to jail, booked on
the probation violation charge, and
returned to court. He told news
men he was surprised at his ar
rest, and declared: "I never was
in New York or Washington."
He won a delay until May 2 on
the grand theft charge so an at
torney could familiarize himself
with the case. It stems from a
12-year-old charge that he took
$1,000 from a woman to act as
her attorney in an immigration
case but disappeared without do
ing so.
The probation was granted him
after a conviction on an earlier
charge, also of grand theft, in
which he wss accused of taking
$500 to gel a woman a liquor li
cense. Authorities said the license
turned out to be a fake.
Officials said Diaz-Infante dis
appeared for 10 years during his
original probation, which was re-
mstitutcd in 1961 with three years
to run.
He is believed to be the Mark
Infante who worked as a field
representative of the Oregon Bu
reau of Labor in 1958-60.
Fri., April 27, 1962 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 7
It Your Paper Hoi Nor Arrived By 6:15 P.M.
Dial OR 2-3321 Between 6 & 7 P.M.
Saturday Only 3 To 5 P.M.
Revision Group Will Consider
Additions To Governor's Power
SALEM (AP) The 17-mem-ber
commission to draft a new
state constitution will meet in Sa
lem Friday and Saturday to con
sider giving the governor nearly
complete power to run the ex
ecutive branch.
The 1961 legislature rejected
Gov. Mark O. Hatfield's plan to
reorganize the executive branch.
And Hatfield's plan wasn't nearly
as drastic as the one to be con
sidered by the commission.
The commission will consider a
subcommittee recommendation
that the governor be the only
elected state official.
There also would be a controller
who would do the auditing that
now is done by the secretary of
state. The legislature would de
cide how the controller should be
chosen.
All other officials, except those
in the legislative branch, would be
appointed by the governor. An
other subcommittee has recom
mended that the governor appoint
all the judges.
The governor would be given
power to reorganize the state ex
ecutive branch, except in cases
where a change In law is required.
In the latter cases, the legislature
would be given 60 days to veto a
plan. If it isn't rejected, it would
become effective.
The commission would remove
the provision limiting the gover
nor to two successive terms.
The State Emergency Board
would be abolished. Since the com
mission already has voted to have
annual sessions of the legislature,
it feels the emergency board
would be unnecessary. It would
make appropriations between leg
islative sessions.
The commission also will con
sider at its next meeting a pro
vision that all sessions of each
house and its committees shall be
open to the public. The constitu
tion now allows secret sessions,
but they are rare.
The commission will submit the
proposed new constitution to the
1963 legislature. Then it would go
on the 1964 ballot.
Sutheriin Patrons
View New School
About 200 persons were on hand
Tuesday night to get an open
house view of the new Sutheriin
Junior High School, reports Mrs.
Jerry DeMuth, correspondent.
All members of the faculty and
officers of the sponsoring PTA
were on hand to welcome the vis
itors. A reception was held in t h e
school's library following the build
ing tours. Mrs. Leo Johnson and
Mrs. Alma Stubbert were in charge
of refreshments for the evening.
Members of the Sutheriin school
board, Supt. Ray Mullen and the
1961-62 and 1962-63 officers of the
PTA were introduced by Richard
Scott, principal of the school.
Special Meet Tuesday
Sixth grade parents have been
extended an invitation to attend a
special meeting of the Sutheriin
Junior High PTA to be held in
the new school library next Tues
day at 7:30 p.m.
During the evening, (here will be
an installation of officers, selec
tion of state convention delegates,
a discussion of "Move-up Day,"
and of plans for graduation.
Mrs. Alma Stubbert, president,
will have charge of the meeting.
ROGER'S TUNE-UP
''eaaaEeaaaaaa 1
i n
0 P
Common Cold Virus Could Kill
Astronauts During Space Flight
FROM NINE TO FIVE
Sy o Fischer
LEGAL
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)
America's astronauts may survive
radiation, meteors and other haz
ards only to die of common colds
during space flights, an Air Force
scientist says.
The Air Force is concerned
enough to have ordered extensive
studies on probable effects of virus-caused
ailments during space
voyages.
The studies at the School of
Aerospace Medicine at Brooks
Air Force Base here deal with two
main areas, says Dr. Seymour S.
Kalter, head of the virology labor
atory: 1. Effects of the stresses of
space on viruses carried by astro
nauts, and
2. Effects of the stresses of
space on the astronauts carrying
the viruses.
"Stresses" is a key word, be
cause of medical discoveries
about what stresses do to the
body.
Reacting to stress, the body re
leases two kinds of hormones
inflammatory and anti-inflammatory.
They act to control each
other, but can get out of balance.
Inflammatory hormones cause
inflammation of the vascular
(blood-circulation) system and'
joints, raise the blood pressure
and cause gout.
Anti-inflammatory hormones de
crease the body's resistance to in
fection. This is why some scientists
fear common colds or other rela
tively harmless ailments could
turn into killers in space.
A few of the larger and more
complex viruses which cause
colds are affected by antibi
otics, Kalter said. Others, such as
polio, can be checked by pre
ventive inoculations. But doctors
have no specific weapons against
most viruses.
Radiation causes mutations in
living things, Kalter said. These
changes could turn a normally
harmless virus into a killer, or
killer into a harmless virus.
r
TIMBER FOR SALE. UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE
INTERIOR, BUREAU OF LAND
MANAGEMENT. ORAL AUCTION
as hereinafter designated will be
received by the District Manager,
Bureau of Land Management, 2583
West Harvard Avenue, Roseburg,
Oregon, at 9:00 A.M., PACIFIC
STANDARD TIME, on Friday,
May 4, 1962, for all timber marked
or designated for cutting. Before
bids are submitted, full informa
tion concerning the timber, the
conditions of sale and submission
of bids should be obtained from
the above District Manager. The
right is hereby reserved to waive
technical defects in this advertise
ment, and to reject any or all
bids. The United States reserves
the right to waive any informality
in bids received whenever such
waiver is in the interest of the
United States. IN DOUGLAS
COUNTY: OREGON: O&C and
PUBLIC DOMAIN: All timber des
ignated for cutting on WV4NWW,
NEWSWW, Sec. 2; NEWSWW, SW
V4SWV4, SEWSWW, SEV4, Sect J;
NEV4NEV4, NWMNWV4, Sec. 10;
NE'eNWVa, WWNWV4, NWViSWVs,
Sec. 11, T. 29 S R. 5 W., W.M.,
estimated for the purpose of this
sale to be 5,042 M bd.ft. Douglas-fir,
298 M bd.ft. Pondcrosa
Pine, 206 M bd.ft. Incense Cedar.
No bid for less than M4.40 per M
bd.ft. for the Douglas-ltr, $7.25 per
M bd.ft. for the Ponderosa Pine,
$4.55 per M bd.ft, for the Incense
Cedar, or a total purchase price of
$75,702.60 will be considered. Mini
mum deposit with bid $7,600.00.
Access to the sale area is avail
able: (a) under the terms and
conditions of Access Road Ease
ment No. RE-R-226 with Almon and
Richard Vredenburg. A total fee
of $50.00 is cited among other con
ditions; (b). under the terms and
conditions of Road Use Agreement
No. R-656 with Longview Fibre
Company; (c) under the terms and
conditions of Right-of-Way Permit
No. R-660 with A. B. McGuirc;
and (d) by Government controll
ed road.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR SfALEO IIDt
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sealed
bldi for gasoline and fuel oil for 1961-'i3
will be received by C. W. Henderar, Clerk
of Elkton School Dilt. No. 34 until the
hour ol 1:00 P.M., Monday May 14, mj.
Trig bldi will be publicly opined immediately
thereafter.
Specification! may be obtained from C. W.
henderer. Clerk.
The Board ot Directors reserves the right
to relect any or all bids.
C. W. HENDERER
Clerk of School Dlst.
ifrjflMfj yi SUPPLIES
"No wonder they wear out! You gals use the front
and back of a typewriter ribbon at the same time!"
Weather Wise
Answer to Provioue Puti le
Pit
At IcOSS 7 Singing voice
3 Wintry forecast 8 Enid's husband
S .Summer landed
forecast 10 Country road
winov forecast. J1 r males
12 Sharpen, as a 18 Clip
......... 01 i ,..
1.1 Anaer
14 Enthusiasm
15 Poems
16 Adult boy
37 Peel
38 Tries
20 Plant!
22 Finish
24 French kins;
9) l -it
2.1 Take out
2S Enervates
2S Jewel
27 Network
28 Repose
111 Assistant
.11 Sharp
32 Formerly
a upon
rrenrnxinr ' upon
2(i More rtgrtlful 38 Harbinger
M Serpent
Knmate
.14 Fnlrtw
36 Row
37 Narrow wy
30 Italian city
41 Moioei,
Iowa
42 Icy forecast
44 Rainy forecast
46 Legal matter
46 Greek letter
49 Poise
53 Natural fat
57 Russian city
58 Miss Gabor
60 Comfort
61 Give
temDOfarUy
02 Seine
63 Ascend
64 Makes Ite
6ft Compass point
66 Snow vehicU
DOWN
1 fired, at a sun
2 Knot '
3 Individuals
4 Shift directions
8 Pronoun
o bpoken
40 flu-li-
43 Decimal digit
45 Slair parti
47 Play part
49 Fasten
50 Region
1M Church season
WUvel
54 Caudal
appondage
St. Essential being
6 American
bacteriologist
59 Dined.
1 2 13 14 I b i W I 8 Id ho III
i : n r?
n rr r n
is u par r"
M fc fr Vi25" I31 I3
55 T55
57 "Vy "c1
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(so i5i ; Sinn ta U' l&& ua
87 58 59 " 60
5T 62 1 S3
5? 55 S5
' ' ' I I I j I 1 1 2T
NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Opposite Vat's Intranet
Just Off Harvard Ave.
625 W. Wharton St. OR 2-4022
FAST SERVICE ON
Autemethr Tone Up
Carburetor! AGenereron Rebuilt
Otraket ftelineel Lubrication
YOU CAN DEPEND ON US!
SON GOES OTHER DIRECTION
SAN DIEGO. Calif. (AP) A
new business called Explosive En
gineering Corp. has been started
by Jon Lindbergh, son of Charles
A. Lindbergh, the famous trans
Atlantic flier.
Jon Lindbergh has engaged in
undersea surveys since a hitch in
the Navy here following gradua
tion from Stanford University. His
new company will handle under
water explosive ;'obs.
PRUDENTIAL LIFE
INSURANCE
HORACE C. BERG
Special Ajenf -Roem 301
Pacific luildina
OH. OR 1-7491-Rea. OR J-719S
3 FORCED TO CLOSE-CUT C
MAYTAG hh.:,' DRYERS
OTHER DRYERS with cancan
trattd "hot spot" heat putt
clothts in contact with htat
at high at 200 dagraat. Re
sult: tint van drying or ovtr
drying. MAYTAG DRYER putt a gen
tla circla of hoot compltttly
around clothas at tamparaturot
of 105 to 115 dtgrtat. Rt
suit: Clorhai fluffy dry with
fawor wrinklas,
Dynamic Disc Lint Filtar
Aurofnartt Clothts Sprinkltr
Filttr-Claanad Air
MODEL 66C
Rtg. $189 . ..
"144"
MODEL 67C
Reg. $229 . .
"169"
QUALITY FURNISHERS
622 S. E. Jackson
PhontOR 2-1821
. p ffW i ' ) 1 1 WORr? ABOUT 0)H05 oOINS 10
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