BROOKINGS, Oregon (AP) — Early returns showed voters in southern Oregon's Curry County were rejecting a measure to double their property tax rate to raise $1.6 million a year for three years. Curry is among several timber counties in southwestern Oregon struggling to pay for basic services such as law enforcement as voters refuse to raise their taxes to fill the gap from declining federal timber revenues. Last November, voters in Curry County rejected a $3.2 million public safety tax increase that would have tripled local property taxes to maintain law enforcement services facing cuts as the federal government ends timber subsidies.