A Chiller i to pi a I f-a g. 2 Tht Newi-Rtview, Roieburg, Tuesday's report of the great rash of forest fires caused by lightning in Doug las County Monday night was portentous. A total of . 57 forest fires were being handled in the county, all caused by ' lightning. The great number of fires was indic ative that the forests have become tinder boxes, which could break into giant torches at any moment. The 32 fires being put out by ForeHt Service crews in the Umpqua National Forest were greater in number than the entire total for 1962. Fire Control Officer Homer Oft reports last year's total for the forest was 23. Of this total, 15 were man-caused. With the rash of 32 in the Umpqua National Forest Monday, the total this year already is 59. Of this 59, 15 have , been man-caused. These figures do not include' the con siderable number handled by the Doug las Forest Protective Association so far.. Both fire fighting organizations are on tenterhooks. They feel fairly confident about being able to handle the rash of lightning caused fires, but it is the more insidious man-caused problem which plagues them. With lightning, they are alerted by foreboding weather. But with man, the fires may occur any time and anywhere. The danger grows more every day as Prevention Checks Needed For Cyclists Bicycling is becoming a prevalent activity for children this time of year with the return to school. That's why Roseburg Chief of Police John Truett of fers some special warnings to parents. He says parents should never assume a youngster knows how to operate a bike in a traffic situation. He urged them to check the young riders on the rules and then check occasionally to see tha,t they THE LIGHTER SIDE: Congealed Season Is By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) So now we come, ready or not, to the end of another summer. Per sonally, I'm ready. One of the factors influencing my attitude is the crime rate, The crime rate, as you know, or dinarily rises during hot weather, and one of the leading summer crimes is congealed salad: If my calendar is accurate, it will be almost nine months be fore I have to eat another con gculcd salad. Which alone is cause for rejoicing. Off hand, I can't think of a more appropriate way to greet the autumn, and the return of uncongcaled table fare, than by renewing my lectures on "Great Dishes of the Western World." For openers, I have selected a dish that Is commonly identified with cool weather dining. It's name is chill con came. King Orders Tobacco The origin of this delectable re past dates back to the Spanish exploration of what is now the Republic of Mexico. One day the King of Spain called his explorers into his office and ordered them to discover some tobacco. "What is tobacco, your majes ty?" the explorers inquired. "It's that weed that the Eng lish explorers found in North Car olina," the King explained. "The Indians grow It. You hold it in your mouth and it burns." The explorers wandered all over Mexico looking for tobacco, but unfortunately the Indians in that part of the new world didn't smoke. Eventually, they stumbled upon a plant which was loaded with cigar-shaped pods. "Maybe this is tobacco," said one of the explor ers, sticking a pod in his mouth. Mitiat The Boat It burned like crazy, causing the explorers to believe that they had hit the jacket. They took a whole boatload of the stuff back to Spain. Needless lo say, the King was disappointed. What the explorers actually had discovered was a new type of pepper plant known to the In- IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE NEWS-REVIEW ADVERTISERS 545 5. E. Main St. Published Dally Evcept Sunday by NEWS-REVIEW PUBLISHING CO. Roietnirg, Oregon Ttlepnone 471-331 En tired at second class matter Mv 7. 120, at the pott of (let at Roieburg, Ort eon. under act of March 3. n, J. V. Brtnnar Publisher The News-Revliw Is a member of the United Press International. NEA Service, Audit Bureau M Circulation and the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Assoc (a lion. National Adveislno Reoresentallve l Newspaper Advertising Service Co., Rust Dunaing, $an Francisco, Calif. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier and Roseburg P. O. Boxes 1 month, I175i t months, 110.50; 1 year. 53)00. By Mall In Oregon: l month, tl.JSs 3 monma, M.xi) months, f.00 1 ear 11.00. Outside et Oregon: I month. 51.75; 3 months. 55.35; months, 510 JO; I year ui.w. Or. Forests Becoming Tinder Boxes Salad Over dians as' "chilly." They called it that because they couldn't cat 11 without something "chilly" to drink. The first person to serve it for dinner was an Indian named Barney. His friends would say "Let's go over and have some chilly with Barney." The Spanish explorers, who couldn't hear very well, translat ed this as "chili con carne." Today, chili con carne is served wherever particular people c o n gregate. I don't know what hap pened to tobacco. Opinions From Natural Resource Grab Attributed To Hatfield To The Editor: You arc so right about the "hands-off" policy of the Game Commission and the statement that Gov. Hatfield is inconsistent in his attitude concerning that pol icy. Whether he is inconsistent with the policy of the Fish Commission remains to be seen, possibly be cause the only hands-off policy of the Fish Commission has is hands off the gillnctters. Gov. Hatfield now threatens the people of Oregon with a drastic cut in basic school support should vot ers turn down the tax measures enacted at the last session of the legislature. He is going to lead the fight to force the people of Oregon to accept tax measures he thought so little of he let those measures become law without his signature. Hatfield's attempted grab of dic tatorship over Oregon's natural re sources is inconsistent with his ac tions on other matters. In that at tempted grab he knew what he wanted. Mr. Webster could use a picture of Gov. Hatfield as a sym bol to explain the meaning of the word "inconsistent." Joseph B. Ilulse Star Rt., Box 14 Winston, Ore. Less Concern For Other Nations Urged By Writer To The Editor: . . The American market is swamped with steel and cotton goods marked "Made in Japan." Canadian lumber is not marked "Made in Canada." Why do we import cheap foreign products that compete with American industry and add to our unemployment? The reason American goods are higher in price always is blamed on the American workmen and the "wicked" labor unions. American workmen demand good wages because they want to buy American homes, automobiles, fur niture and appliances. If American workmen lived like Japanese work men, prices would be lower, but not low enough. Japanese imports would still undersell American goods. Japan has one of the most mod WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1963 the forests continue to lose the vital moisture which has kept damp the great masses ofkindling caused by Oct. 12 windstorm. And what worries the services most of all is that the regularly high-hazard sea son of hunting is still to come. On several occasions, the governor , has pondered whether or not to delay the hunting season.' He will have probably more reason than ever this year if the weather remains hot and dry. By that time, practically all moisture will have been sucked out of the forests, and even cautious hunters will be pro viding a danger not seen in many years. It can't be emphasized too strongly that this is probably the worst potential fire year in history. The state's fire fighting machinery is the best it has ever been, but even the best won't be able to cope with the fire problems man can cause in forests which have been shred ded to splinters in many cases by the big windstorm. There may be some good weather weekends yet this fall before the hunting season and these, too, are making fire fighters quake. If ever a year there was to bend over backwards to be cautious with fire in the forests, this is it. Let's do our part to help keep our forests jntact. are following them. It's not a spectacularly big problem in the total picture of traffic deaths and injuries, but it's notable. Truett points out that last year 305 bicycle riders under the age of 15 were injured in accidents in the state. Four of these youngsters were killed. A little precaution on the part of par ents is the obvious answer. The Almanac Today is Wednesday, Sept. 11, the 254th day of 1963 with 11 to follow. The moon is approaching new phase. The morning star is Jupiter. The evening stars are Saturn, Mars and Jupiter. On this day in history: In 1841, all members of presi dent John T y 1 e r's cabinet re signed, except Secretary of State Daniel Webster, . in protest over the president s veto of the bank ing bill: In 1940, Buckingham Palace in London was damaged by German Air raiders. In 194S, former Japanese Pre mier Tojo tried to commit sui cide to escape prosecution as a war criminal. A thought for the day Wash ington Irving, the American nov elist, said, "A woman's whole life is a history of affections." ern steel mills in the world. It was built and financed with Amer ican capital. Raw materials to make the stcql comes largely from the U.S. The finished product is sold in this country at a price low er than can be commanded by the American product. Our government seems more concerned about the welfare of oth er nations than the welfare of our own people. Our politicians need not wail for Mr. K. to bury us. They are doing an excellent job without his assistance. It is sad to watch a great nation decline, to sec' citizens lacking patriotism while others lose confi dence in their government, when greed for a temporary profit for a few is more important than the welfare of our country.. I say "temporary profit" be cause in a few short years these profiteers and politicians will all be dead. But the great harm they now indict on our nation will re main as a lasting monument to their folly. Frank Liening C. V. Rt., Box 545 Winston, Ore. PTA Course Of Action Urged For Tax Ballot To The Editor: Now that the budget is to be voted on by the taxpayers, the Oregon PTA has come out with a course of action which I heartily endorse. They urge all citizens to (1) Register to vote. Voter regis tration closes Saturday, Sept. 14. (2) Obtain the facts. (3) Use the team approach. Work with all groups, and other interested citi zens, coordinate your efforts for greater impact. (4) Inform the voters. Use newspaper publicity. (I assume that letters such as this would be classified as newspaper publicity); telephone committees, and personal contact. (5) Vote. Time is limited start action to day! Obtaining the facts is the hard est of the five. The Albany "Great er Oregon" is probably the lead ing weekly of all the papers that gives the facts from the taxpayers' position. An editorial from the Cottage Grove Sentinel lists the two courses of action that have been reported U By ROBERT C. RUARK I suppose I am a touch naive, but I have been following the tortu ous processes of United Nations reasoning for quite a lot of years now, and I flat don't understand a lot of the thinking involved. We have had a hassel of interna tional proportion lately, allegedly attached to whether some Syrians snuck over the Israeli border and murdered a brace of farmers. As this was written, Morocco and the Soviet Union had succeeded in de laying on a combined American United Kingdom resolution con demning Syria for a couple of bor der knockoffs. The hits were de scribed as "wanton murder" by Israeli Ambassador Michael Co may, and I am quite sure Comay is right in-his description. Mumbo-Jumbo Considerable Of course there is a lot more n umbo - jumbo about U.N. super vision of truce, violation, Moroc can amendments, and by the time this sees light somebody will eith er be condemned or uhcomdemn cd. This I can understand. (Ed. note: The Soviet Union killed the condemnation resolution by invok ing its veto power). But has anybody offered to cen sure the Congolese government for supporting Holdcn Roberto's mur Readers possible by the "newspapers, and then lists a third one: Quote, "The third course of action open that apparently legislators, state officials and some organiza tions are not cognizant of, or are just ignoring, is a decrease in the state budget. This would benefit everyone." Ben Musa says "a defeat of the tax bill would be a mandate from the people. We couldn't kick the people in the teeth with new tax es." Note that he says new taxes and doesn't say new ways to tax. The income tax changes in this budget puts more load on the mid dle and low incomes, with only a i little increase on high incomes, plus a whack at all who are living on fixed income, or have no in comethat includes most of the elderly! One of our legislators compared i Oregon's budget to Idaho's, where state taxes are much lower, be- cause, he said, it is a lower service state. If this would be what the ; people want, it is a simple rlc-1 cision for the voters to decide j whether they want more services! or less taxes! To state it another way: Distribute more welfare mon-! ey, or hire more caseworkers? i Senate's two leading authorities We are told that property taxes j on military affairs have come out will go up if this budget is de-1 a g a i n s t the nuclear test ban teatcd. It is said defeat would cut j treaty, indicating that ratification the basic school support. Maybe j 0f the pact may be opposed more it will. Will that necessarily ruin by Democrats than Republicans, our educational system. 1 don't J Administration hopes for mini know, but 1 for one would like to j mum opposition to the treaty try it and see. 1 don't think it j wt.re dimmed last week by an- would, but there is another aspect to this that is seldom mentioned. The men who spend our money at the state level want the control of the Basic School Support mon- ey! why? The state spenders nat urally want to handle this money because on this level the taxpayer doesn't have much of any chance of control, or even of getting ac curate information. It is the ten dency of the state spenders as ' well as federal spenders to favor j a bureaucracy that cannot be in vestigated efficiently or controlled by the people. If we can reduce state expenditures I won't object lo the fact is I will welcome the equal increase - on property; taxes at this level at which I have i more opportunity for control. Stacv Adams Box 427 Yoncalla, Ore N. Takes Odd Stand On derous onslaught against the inno- cents, mostly black, in neighbor- ing Angola on March 15, 1961? Has- anything been seriously done about Nasser's intervention into lemen: nas anyDoay siappea uenmgsr or nave we already forgot- Bella's wrist for his offer to "die a little" to the extent of 10,000 20,000 men to bang down the Portu guese overseas provinces? At least 500 people died horribly at the hands of drink-and-drug-crazed mercenaries in Angola on that March 15, and nobody official ly said a word about people being fed into sawmills, football being played with dismembered babies, pregnant women being impaled on trees, and people generally being hacked into hamburger by recruit ed mercenaries from the Congo. Not a word. How do we describe murder and a threat to peace i these days? Definitions Asked How do we define intervening in other people's wars, such as the Yemeni operation? Do we have a sort of Bureau of Standards sched ule for murder definition? How is it so bad for a handful of Syrians to kill a couple of Israelis when 500 die in Angola on a single morn ing by this "border-crossing" the U.N. makes so much of? I do not know the answers to these questions, which is why 1 ask them. I suppose U Thant might tell me, but he spoke some gobble degook on Cuba after his visit to Castro, and his own country is in trouble enough at the moment. Dag Hammarskjold's dead, but maybe his brother knows the an swer. At least his brother knew some of the answers lo an old wound called Katanga. Which reminds me again: Has anybody satisfactorily explained the United Nations' mercenary hi jack of Katanga, in order to secure the loot for the Central Govern ment in Leopoldvillc a clear-cut case of aggression against a self declared independent country? How was it bad for Tshombc to personally hire mercenaries when the United States picked up the tab for the U.N.'s mercenaries in the Congo? A mercenary is some body who fights on orders to knock off another country's turf. Aren't We Meddling What, for instance, is the United Nations going to do about our blat ant physical fiddling in Viet Nam? Are we not meddling in other pco- Senate Arms A lil Ul nOrlTIGS J ! m, T" ac I" Rsn II II I 65l Da II WASHINGTON (UPI) nouncements of two key southern senators that they would vote against it. The Senate takes up I the treaty Monday. Both Sen. Richard B Russell. D-Ga., chairman of the armed services committee, and Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss. who heads the preparedness subcom mittee, said concern over possi ble military disadvantages of the treaty prompted their decisions. A UPI poll of other members of the armed services committee showed two senators in favor of ratification, three undecided and one undecided by leaning toward ratification. Sens. Stuart Symington, D-Mo.. and Stephen M. Young, D-Ohio. j were in favor of the treaty: Sens. Sam J. F.rvin Jr., D-N. C, How - ard W. Cannon. D-Nev., and J. Glenn Beail, R-Md., said they Murd er pie's internal affairs, when we suddenly become disillusioned with that dreadful Diem family, so full of bad Nhus, and attempt a coup that goes as sour as the Bay of ten the Bay of Pigs, and where was the United Nations on that one, pray? Should not the United States have been censured for at tempting to mount a coup against Castro? It was, after all, his coun try. Right now if South Africa raised a finger at Bcchuanajand, all hell would break loose in the U.N. halls. I do not suppose that South Africa is angry at Bechuanaland, but that doesn't seem to count these days. Nothing was said when Ghana made its pass at Togoland, and it is, after all, Africa for the Africans, as even Soapy Williams knows. Stupidity Pleaded You will please foregive my stupidity on these things, but I cannot see how you can stop sell ing arms to South Africa while permitting Bella to raise men and money to declare war against Por tugal, the while admitting Portugal as an ally in the NATO arrange ment. We seem to have reached a strange position in the United Na tions, in which privilege is all, and it just depends on who is doing the shooting and at whom. If you ran a government the same way there wouldn't be any penalty for mur der, but they might just hang you for running through a red light. (Copyright. 196) by United Feature Synd. Inc.) Controversial Drug Element Not Effective Against Animal Cancer WASHINGTON (UPI) The , scientific tests "leave no doubt as government said today scientific tests showed that the primary element of the controversial drug krebiozen is a chemical agent that was found to be ineffective in treating cancer in animals. The Department of Health, Ed ucation and Welfare (HEW) said its scientists reported the Krebio zen powder submitted for tests was creatine an amino acid de rivative found in human blood and in muscle tissues. "It (creatine) is readily avail able as an inexpensive laboratory chemical," the department said j in announcing the results of com ' prchensive tests, j The powder sample was sub I mittcd to the Food k Drug Ad ministration (FDA) last July 12 1 by Dr. Stcvan Durovic, who The I claimed to have discovered Krebi ozen,, and Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, Durovic's chief sponsor. The department said a scries of had not made up their minds yet, though Bcall said he planned to j announce his stand this week. Sen. Clifford P. Case, R- N. J., said he wanted to hear all the closing arguments on the ques tion before making a final de cision, but added he had heard nothing so far to cause him to vote against the treaty. Stennis' fellow Mississippian, Democrat James O. Eastland, said he also would oppose the treaty, which bans all but under ground nuclear tests. But Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, D-Ga.. Russell's junior colleague, told ! United Press International he had j not yet made up his mind on the ' I matter. I Two other southerners, Sens. J. simm Th,,rmnnH n.c r .nj ! Russell B. Long. D-La.! also are ! expected to ommse the treatv i Long cast the onlv vote against! 1 it in the foreign 'relations com-1 mittce but said he reserved the ' right to change his mind. ' At One Time, Rattlesnakes Were Common In County . It is said that as a person grows older his mind goes back to experiences of days when he was much younger. Perhaps that is why a report by The News-Review's correspondent, Mrs. Durnin Swingley, writing about the killing of rattlesnakes in the Days Creek area recently, revived some of my old memories. Today it is news when someone finds and kills a rattle snake. It wasn't many years ago, however, when killing rattlesnakes in Douglas County was too commonplace to be considered worthy of mention in the newspapers. lieiore work was started on the North Umpqua Highway, soon to be completed, there was a country road which extended for a short distance beyond Rock Creek. If one went further east, it was on foot or horseback. The only improved way was a rough trail maintained by the U.S. Forest Service. No hiker would think of ventur ing on this trail without first arm ing himself with a stick. This stick, was from six to eisht feet Ions. was cut from vine maple, hazel i or some other green shrub, so it would not be dry or brittle. It was an inch or more in diameter. As such it would serve as a cane but, more essentially, it was a de fense against rattlesnakes. Boys Armed At times I helped with hikes by Boy Scouts. We required all boys to arm themselves with clubs. An adult usually went well in advance to locate snakes, if any, before the boys reached the spot. Fortunate ly we never encountered rattlers on any of these hikes, probably because the boys made so much noise they announced their coming and the snakes moved out of the vay. I'll never forget, however, a time when I was making my way alone on a narrow trail, which dropped off on one side i hundred feet or more to the river, and was al most perpendicular on the other. Hiking along with my head down I barely caught myself in time as my reflexes started me in a dive over the cliff. A rattler had just cut loose almost even with my ear. I went back to find that he had retreated into a crevice and I couldn't reach him with my pole. I know full well that I am the holder of the world's standing broad jump record. The trouble is there were no official present to record the gigantic leap. Rattler Bunes I was fishing the river near Swamp Creek. There was a dry wash only a few feet from the river and paralleling the stream. A small sapling had fallen across the wash. I stepped over the sap ling, heard a noise, looked down and saw a huge rattler, coiled within inches of my foot, buzzing angrily. I "sailed through the air with the greatest of ease," as the old song goes. I hit somewhere out near the river. With a big stick and some boulders I finally killed the snake and have twelve rattles and a button to prove it. But. after all the scare' and ex - citement, I lost what had been a good and copious oreaKtast On another occasion the man who later was to become my brother-in-law was with me on a fish ing trip to -Steamboat and back. to the identity of the powder Dr Durovic labelled 'krebiozen. The HEW said the krebiozen sample was tested by various methods including infra-red pho tography, spectographic studies, x-rays and crystollographic. Concerning creatine, the de partment said in a statement: "Creatine is in muscle tissue and in blood in lesser amounts. The human body will produce in 24 hours as much as 100,000 times the amount of creatine as the alleged content of 'krebio zen' in one ampule. "The chemical was tested some time ago against animal tumors in the routine cancer chemo therapy screening program of the National Cancer Institute. "It was found to be ineffective, even in very high doses." JOHNS-MAN VILLE Quality Roofing Check Us For Our Low Prices ESTIMATES On New and Repair Jobs Prepare Now For The Winter Rains GERRETSEN BUILDING SUPPLY CO. Flegel Building Odell St. Phone 672-2636 One Block Off Diamond Lake Blvd At Stop Light The Editor's Corner By Charles V. Stanton We camped at night in a fine grove. We saw a mound that look ed ideal for our bed for the night. As we approached, however, there was a sound which we thought surely was a rattlesnake. We jump ed back, drawing our pistols, yelling "buzzer," expecting a s.iake to appear. Instead out through a pile of dry leaves came a flock of ground hornets. Our re treat was without dignity. Screaming Wild Long after dark a party of fish ermen arrived. They had hiked in from Rock Creek to spend the weekend. We noticed one fisherman and his son spot the hummock which had looked so good to us. They rushed to the site and quick ly spread out their blankets and hopped into bed. Moments later there was a lot of wild screaming and the two fish ermen leaped out in then under wear and went tearing through the nearby brush, yelling at the top of their voices. The sound of their, screaming blended-with the laugh ter my friend and I no longer were able to suppress, despite stuf fing our mouths with the corners of our blankets. . The two came back, retrieved their bedding and clothing with forked sticks cut for them by their friends and made their bed else where. Boy, did we get dirty looks the next morning! 3n 2), Cjone (J3y, Taken from the files of the New Review , 40 YEARS AGO Sept. 11, 1923 Sixty-five high school student registered in Roseburg yesterday, 58 of the number being seniors, it was reported today. Revolutionary radicalism, Bol shevism, IWW-ism and similar movements would become almost obsolete, if the people of the United States really understood the ' Constitution, Garland W. Powell of the Americanism Commission of the American Legion, declared in a recent bulletin to workers in his organization. 25 YEARS AGO Sept. 11, 1938 More farm land should be made available not only for newcomers who are coming to this state in increasing numbers, but also for the younger generation of Oregon farmers, it is declared in a report just published by the state plan ning board, it was announced by Ormond Bean, chairman. The report estimates that 751, 000 acres of agricultural land could be developed through 30 irrigation projects listed in the report. 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 11, 1953 It has happened every Thursday for 40 years at Sutherlin, but this Thursday's Sutherlin Sun is some thing special. It is a celebration of the 40th year of publishing a weekly paper every Thursday. The biggest edi tion came off the presses this Thursday, the Ruby Edition. LOST TOM UCEKSE TO CHIVE! Sri ROLF'S PREFERRED INSURANCE ' Tut letiia. lutillniiu tnilillt 939 S. E. Stephens 673-S166