Of ten-Delayed Olalla Dam Report Is Due In 3 Months nT.he nfInn;dLayed final "Port out saying whether or not feasibili- u.uua uuiu appears now to be about three months of. This was the indication Monday night by John Mangan, area engin eer for the Bureau of Reclamation. The Bureau is conducting the stud ies on the proposed dam on Olalla Creek. Mangan was the featured speaker Monday at the monthly meeting of the Douglas County Wa ter Resources Advisory Committee meeting in the Courthouse at Rose burg. He said he expected the Salem office of the Bureau would receive final engineering reports from the Boise, Idaho, headquarters in about three weeks. Then, the Salem of fice will complete a field draft which will be printed for release. He estimated this would take "a couple of months." Delay Explained Mangan reported the latest delay was due to a question about a struc ture for fish in conjunction with the dam. He reviewed the physical charac teristics pf the proposed dam, with- Carniva! Due Friday At Lookingglass Gym The Lookingglass PTA will spon sor a carnival to be held this Fri day evening in the school gym be ginning with supper to be served at 5:30 preceding the opening of the carnival games. Chili pie, chili burgers, doughnuts, soda pop and other beverages will be on the munu. There is no admission charge, according to Hazel Marsh, corre spondent. Door prizes will be given. Tickets for all the concessions will be 10 cents each. The array of booths will include a "fun house," fortune telling, jail house, balloons, and various side shows. The proceeds from the carnival will be added to the scholarship fund. MC Teachers Slate , , Talk On Tax Measure The Myrtle Creek Classroom Teachers Association at a meeting set for Friday at 4 p.m. in the school cafeteria will host Cecil W. Posey of Portland, speaking on the tax measure to be voted upon Oct. 15. Posey is the executive secre tary of the Oregon Education As sociation, one of the groups favor ing the bill. According to Don Grinolds, pres ident of the Myrtle Creek group, Posey is appearing in Myrtle Creek at the invitation of the teachers' group, and the public is invited to attend the Friday meeting. Posey will begin his talk promptly at 4 p.m. . ty was likely. However, the indica tions are strong from previous re ports that such feasibility is al most certain. Mangan said the dam will be 186 feet high and 1,150 feet long. It is designed for a capacity of 73.000 acre-feet. Included would be 31, 000 acre-feet for irrigation, flood control and other uses; 960 acre feet for municipal water for Win-ston-Dillard and Roberts Creek; 1, 770 feet for water quality control; and 9,650 feet for fishlifc. With this capacity, Mangan said, it is estimated a total 2.6 acre-feet per acre would be available annual ly for irrigation of 14,460 acres. For flood control, he said the dam would be drawn down to a low point by the first of November. It would then be filled by the first of May. The physical structure of the project would include 42 miles of main canals and four pumping plants. The dam is designed for a lifetime of 100 years. The payout period will be 50 years after de velopment. He emphasized that establish ment of an irrigation district and a negotiated contract between the district and the Bureau would call for votes by property owners in the district. He said an irrigation dis trict is necessary to represent the people of the area. Also on hand tor the meeting was Henry Stewart, chief of the planning section for the Portland Division of the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. He said the compre hensive water resource develop ment study being conducted for Douglas County may be ready for report to the people in about a year. At present the indications are, he said, that the "best poten tial" for damsites may be found at Galesville on Cow Creek, Tiller or Days Creek on the South Ump qua and Hinkle Creek in the Cala pooia watershed. He said the South Umpqua sites are being consider ed for possible hydroelectric pow er generation, as well as the other purposes usually included in a multipurpose package. In a postscript later in the meet ing, Stewart said a dam similar to that at Olalla is being considered on the middle fork of the Coquille River near Camas Valley as part of that basin's over-all water de velopment. He said investigations are still in the preliminary stage and they show only that "a dam might be possible." The final speaker was Malcolm Karr, hydrologic engineer for the state Water Resources Board! He reported on the progress of water quality and temperature studies being made in cooperation with the Corps of Engineers and other agen cies. He said the final analyses are slated next week at the computer center at Oregon State University. Ireland Talk Set For KC Meeting The Knights of Columbus will have a special program and social night in connection with their regu lar meeting set for 8 p.m. Wednes day at St. Joseph's Catholic Center. Father Eunan Buckley, church pastor, who returned last week from a visit to his former home . in Ireland, will tell of his trip. An other guest speaker is to be se-' cured from the staff of the Vet erans Administration Hospital, ac cording to Steve Fercbe, grand knight. Refreshments will be served. Tues., Sept. 24, ,1963 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3 MAKING SECOND VISIT The 70-member Portland Symphony Orchestra is seen here from an interesting pho tographic angle as it practices for its forthcoming tour Reservations Are Open For Writers' Banquet , Reservations are still being tak en for the Roseburg Writer's Club's annual banquet, scheduled for Sun day at 1:30 p.m. at the Bamboo Room of Dale's Cafe. Persons planning to attend should make reservations as early as possible with Hilda Peterson, phone 673-5321, or Mrs. William Bladorn 673-4240. There will be a coffee hour for those coming early. Speaker for the occasion will be Thomas E. Gaddis, author of the popular book "Birdman of Alca traz," which te)s the incredible story of Robert Stroud. Stroud now an old man, has spent a life time in federal prisons for two slay ings, but has battled the courts for years for his freedom. of six cities outside Portland, including Roseburg. Besides its Oct. 15 concert here, it will play at Pendleton, The Dalles, Bend, Medford and Coos Bay. Classics, Modern Works Billed For Appearance Of Orchestra Maestro Jacques Singer has pro grammed a familiar, duct of clas sics and a delightful modern work for the Portland Symphony Orches tra's single concert in Roseburg Oct. 15 at Roseburg High School. His audience will hear the dis ciplined 70-mcmber orchestra in George Frederick Handel's flash ing "Water Music" suite and Peter Ilich Tschaikovsky's "Symphony No. 4 in F Minor" on the classical CLUB GIVES UP LONDON (UPI) The Wood Green town football club is call ing it 'quits at the end of this season because of too many bur glaries. In the last seven years, the club has been burglarized 60 times. In the last one, walls were ripped out, machines smashed, the team's first-aid kit stolen and beer bottles emptied on the floor. There had been another raid the previous night. POTLUCK SET TONIGHT Women of the Relief Society of I the Church of Jesus Christ of Lat ter Day baints will nave a potluck supper and social evening tonight at 6:30 at the church. Husbands of members are invited. V RSI i i I BROADLOOM SCATTER RUGS All Have Bound Edges. Thick Viscose Rayon Cut Pile. Assorted Colors. Sizes 15"x29"; 15"x26"; 20" x 24" . EACH 57' 100 COTTON FOAM BACK RUGS Assorted Colors. Size 20" x 30" EACH 77' side. The modern work, is English man Benjamin Britten's charming "Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Purcell." Mark Huber, manager of the Portland Symphony, will narrate the Britten composition, which sets a melodic aural picture of each instrument's orchestral role against a 17th century background theme by Henry Purcell. . Tschaikovsky wrote his "Fourth Symphony" in 1878. One of his fa vorites, he called it "an echo of my intimate spiritual lite." Handel wrote his "Water Music" for a utilitarian use. It was to be played in 1717 by a barge-borne musicians accompanying Ens land's King George l's procession from Lambeth to Chelsea on the Thames River. The concert is scheduled to start in the high school gymnasium at 8:15 p.m. Oct. 15. Tickets for the second visit in the history of the orchestra to Roseburg are on sale from any Roseburg Symphony So ciety member or from Ricketts' Music Store in Roseburg. OAKLAND MEETINGS SET The Junior High Fellowship group of the Oakland Community Presbyterian Church will resume its regular meetings on Wednes days beginning this week. Meetings start at 7 p.m. in the basement of the church. Mrs. Hel- I en Reimcr is leader of the group. LIKE SUNNY BROOK! Now do you like your whiskey? Jt Smooth nd mild? BUY.THE STRAIGHT 1 w& JL ff BOTH SUNNY 1 BROOK SUNNY 8 i; BROOK H $405 Pint SmeothlnlttmiMt BUY THE BLEND tilt DID SUMY HOOK OISTIUERY COM. LOUISVILLE, KY KENTUCKY STMIOHT ISIIMOtil j HISKEY 00 PROOF, KENTUCKY BIENDEI WHISKEY 68 PROOF. tiX tMIK NEUTMt Villi , re n Irfo -Piaipeir fain) 'ffn That's -Right Mom. ..with the . jfrV WESTWKHOUSE Ffl HEAVY DUTY LAUNDROMAT Rinsing System YOU GET CLEANER CLOTHES- OR YOUR MONEY BACK! Look At These Money-Saving Features: k Washes 12 dry pounds. 2 deep rinses and one flush rinse (only - Wesringhouse has it) k Automatic lint ejector (NOT a lint collector) . k Suds V water s aver Loading and unloading door Variable (peed transmission gives more wash ing power and guaranteed 5 year MATCHING DRYER 1? with gentle heat (or all fabrics Reg. 219.95 NOW ONLY i . . i Model OUR I j'-J"" SPECIAL PRICE tdS? for this new heavy duty S5AS2 I Laundromat . . . ONLY j . SSSSS V O 'i V j YoonbeSURE...if it's WeStlntflOUSS lMlo)o Sp WILL HOLD 1 U Liberal Terms, EVEN LESS WITH TRADE of course 721 S. E. OAK AVE. 673-5521