4 The News-Review, Roieburg, Ore. Wed., July 6, 1949 Published Dally Except Sunday by th News-Review Company, Inc. latorti tcvond eliM matter M !, man, mi the pail f flc ft! Eotaburr, Orcfoo. under set ! March I, 187S CHARLES V. STANTON p? EDWIN L. KNAPP Editor Managar Member of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulations Rtprioted by WEST-HOLLID A CO., INC., mrei In New York, Chicago, 8kb Frmnciaco. Loi Anfelet, Seittle, PortUnd, St. Louli. SUBSCRIPTION RATES in Oregon By Mail rr Tear 18.00, ilx moothi 14.59, thret moatht lt.80. Br City Carrier Per year 110.00 (In advance), lest than n year, per month 11.00. Outilde Oregon By Hall Per year 19.00. tlx mntith 14 7-1. hrp month n.' TELEVISION PROSPECTS By CHARLES V. STANTON Despite the fact that facilities for transmission are now . available, several years will elapse before television becomes general on the Pacific Coast except in metropolitan areas. Such is the prediction by Wendell Webb, managing editor of The Oregon Statesman, Salem, reviewing a feature article from the New York Times. Says Webb: It will be a long time before there are actually television transmitters In areas outside of population centers. The law of economics prevents. So far, none of the four existing television networks has made money, and no single station has olalmed to be getting rich. The major reason Is that television operation is four or five times as expensive as radio and not yet is there a sufficient audience to warrant rates commensurate with costs. Although residents in "the sticks" may be compelled to wait for a considerable time before installing television sets, inhabitants of the larger cities have brighter prospects. Already television is serving an area covering roughly 60,000,000 population. Sixty-four stations are operating in the country, with 10 on the Pacific Coast "seven in Los Angeles (more than in any other one city in the nation), two in San Francisco and one in Seattle." Six applications have been filed at Portland, but no im mediate construction is in prospect. The television wave differs from radio in the fact that while radio reception is only slightly affected by curvature of the earth and intervening hills and valleys, television generally serves only on a line-of-sight basis. In other words, the television wave does not "bend" with curvature of the earth or around and over hills. Good reception depends upon a receiving set being situated in a straight unobstructed line to the transmitter. This gives television a normal operating range of 50 to 100 miles. Some exceptions exist, as, for instance, the fact that Seattle programs are being well received at Astoria, Oregon, where Station KAST is considering plans to put in relay equipment which will rebroadcast the Seattle programs. Seattle signals, under exceptional conditions, have been re ceived at Salem, Webb reports. Several interesting experiments are in progress to in crease television range. One very successful method is to beam signals directly at relay stations located in airplanes circling high above the transmitter, thus extending the line-of-sight effective area by many miles and getting the signal down into valleys which otherwise would be cut off from reception. Webb concludes his interesting summary with the follow ing: , . Television as a faotor In International relations Is re garded as Immensely Important In Its potentialities. How people look and live, far more than how they sound and . and what they say, gives an Inside Into conditions the world over. If television develops a new era of mutual understanding Its Importance will far transcend its contri bution to the world of entertainment. As Webb states, it probably will be several years before television reaches into the less sparsely settled areas. This is due to technical and mechanical difficulties in addition to economic factors. The News-Review's radio station, KRNR, is watching television developments closely and is preparing to pro vide programs as quickly as the area can be served. It will be necessary, however, to wait until network facilities be come available, for it would not be possible to originate full-time local programs. Roseburg is on the coaxial cable system built by the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company partly to handle television circuits. Thus television programs will be piped into this city and it is planned to provide local transmission just as soon as practical. Self-Reliance Facing Extinction In Security-Conscious America By BRUCE BIOSSAT Fortune Magazine's recent survey of college campuses shows graduating students more worried about old-age pensions and simi lar security safeguards than anything else In their future. Add to these protections a job " ' J ' r" " " " : i it ; .. ' A - f-i . . - i Kir: WW WINS HIGH CLIMBING EVENT Rodney Leatherwood is pictured above starting hit climb up the 94-foot spar tree at Sutherlin's Timber Days celebration. Leatherwood won first place in the contest, in which seven started but only three finished. By Vialinett S. Martin Sleeping Beauty's palace could have been In Oregon. The jungle around the castle had grown so fast and so thick and so high, remember? Our first year here when EJ was spending all his time from daylight to dark working on the place, we seemed to be making marvelous headway. Just won derful! Then when he began spending eight hours a day In an office, the Jungle began to gain again. If the fairy should put Ore- gonians to sleep for a hundred years there would be on the map Just one thick mass of green marked "as yet unknown." That Is, If she put the Indians to sleep, too. So fast would all this labor of man be undone by the Incred ible force of nature! An Oregon fairy could do It In half that time, easily! Last spring we had two roads bulldozed through to the back fence: One on a level along Secley Creek; one going up, and I mean up! They were Just two red gashes, marring the beauty of the woods for a while; then green began to soften the harshness of the torn up soil, and pushed- together trash waiting for burn ing. In another year If we want a trail through there we shall need a bulldozer again! Our first Christmas we hacked a path through to the back fence; we had been here 10 days, and every one we knew was far away. But it was a happy day anyhow. We thought we were getting 'back to the land' but what we were doing was beginning a bat tle with the Jungle, a battle we are losing fast! It's lovely to look at. yes, . Indeed. It feeds the heart after years of city living, But I laugh when I think of my relieved farewell to California "devil-crass"! Hera the whole forest is a besieging, never let ting up, forc! I couldn't possible say 'enemy,' could you? As we drive along the highway and see cleared places, we do not see them with tourists' un-know-ing eyes! We know the unre mitting toll, and courage and faith It takes to make a small farm out of a woods clearing. It's all we can do to keep the house from being covered up with the woods crowding closer and closer to take back what was once theirs! In the Day's Hews (Continued From Page One) with a big, established company and a wife and a few children and you have what most college men in tneir twenties are secKing today. It la alarming to realize that securlty-mlndedness has gone so far down the age ladder that It now tends to dominate the think ing of our college youth. It Is too easy and too trite, how ever, to respond to this situation with the regular exhortations to self-reliance, and then let it go nt that. The problem isn't that simple. These youngsters have come of age in a world still staggering from the brutal blows of two world wara and a deep depres sion. The dilemmas that led to these disasters are still largely unsolved. The complexities of life, whether In war or peace, seem to have grown beyond man's comDrehenslon. While man nevertheless game ly continues the search for solu tions, he Is trying at the same time to Insulate nimseu Hgainsi a recurrence of disaster. This has been true In many areas of the earth. This country'! effort to pro tect Its people against catastro phe was propelled swiftly forward- by Franklin D. Roosevelt's program of social legislation In the 1930s. Republicans fought the pro gram nt the time, but historians today say social and economic conditions were such that cither major party probably would have had to find bold new answers to the call (or security. Since then, a struggle to widen the domain of secure living has waxed and waned, and it Is still going on. But nothing has hap pened, or seems likely to occur, to upset the basic security frame work of the country. ' It draws its main strength from a mood born of haunting fear of another great depression. And the terrific dislocations of war and postwar years have lined up many more recruits under the security banner. mis is tne atmospnere nreatn- ed by college students in 19-19. It should enable us to understand how they can be thinking of pen sions anil a safe job instead of ad venturous risk-taking. Hut it should shock Us anew into realizing that in all this necessary attention to security measures we have Indeed ignored the vital need to build a society of resourceful Individuals. How to have security and self reliance side by side Is admittedly a hard nut to crack. But the evi dence indicates that most poli ticians are not even facing the problem earnestly. It Is high time more. Out of the last 20 years, our national government has gone in the hole during IS years. Only in the fiscal years of 1948 and 19-17 did we take In more than we spent. During these years, our per capita national debt rose from practically nothing to about $1700. The bookkeeping year Just finish ed adds something like $12 or $13 to that total. IF, as an Individual, you had gone deeper Into debt during 18 out of the past 20 years, you'd be figuring that maybe you'd bet ter begin to do something about reducing your spending. (If you didn't conic to that conclusion on your own account, your creditors would do It for you.) What kind of thinking are our government people doing? Here's an Interesting dispatch along that line from Washington: "Senator Murray (Democrat, from Montana) urges a confer ence of labor leaders, buslness- they stopped ducking it. We owe to the masses of men a higher duty than merely to make them secure against dis aster and basic want. We owe them a life where the human spirit is free and eager to grow to Its fullest height, where the sum of that Individual growth will be a society of constantly widening economic and social horizons. men, farmers and consumers to take a searching look at the drift of the nation's economy. "The Montana senator told a reporter he hopes to obtain action in this session of Congress on a bill he and seven other Democrats are sponsoring TO DIRECT THE PLANNING OF A FIFTEEN BILLION DOLLAR FEDERAL PUBLIC WORKS PROGRAM." THAT is to 3ay, after going In the hole during 18 out of the past 20 years, our political leaders are telling us that the thing to do is to SPEND STILL MORE AND GO STILL DEEPER INTO THE HOLE IN THE FUTURE. Maybe that's good politics. But It ISN'T good business. REPRESENTATIVE NORBLAD, of Oregon, asks a disturbing question in Washington. He says: "What does the administration plan to do about paying average John Doc citizens for war savings bonds due to mature in the next few years?" He adds: "The total of these maturing bonda will soon be almost equal to our entire national budget . . . I should be Interested In know ing Just what we propose to do to pay this obligation." . do we propose WELL, what to do? Start swapping IOU's with each other? That's where we're headed for If we don't get some business management Into our governmen tal affairs. Unemployment Payments Drop, But Top '48 Pace Seasonal employment gains In construction, food processing and lumbering continued for the fourth successive month, reducing June payments to those without work to $1,113,838 but still 38.6 percent higher than a year ago, the State Unemployment Com pensation Commission reports. Payments to those usually em ployed in the seasonal industries dropped to less than a sixth of the peak- February totals, while others declined only 50 per cent. During the first half of 1949 nearly 60 percent of Oregon checks went to those in food pro cessing, construction and lumber ing or more than was received by these same groups in 1946 and 1947 combined, Exhaustions of benefit rights for the 1948-49 year also helped to reduce June payments by $358,414 or 23.4 percent below May. Of 100,878 who filed state claims In the past year, 19,755 drew the entire amount to which they were entitled, while more than 27,000 failed to receive one check. New claims for the 1949-50 benefit year which starts with the first week of July have reached 12,189, nearly 40 percent more than a year ago. About 45 percent of the new claimants are from the seasonal groups. During the benefit year Just ended, the state paid $12,905,908 to covered workers an increase of 66.4 percent over the previous year's total of $7,753,773. In the past 12 months $7,543,301 in re adjustment allowances went to unemployed veterans also high er than for any similar period except for the first winter after the war. The number of unemployed re ceiving checks the last week of ! June was l.sua. a aecrease oi 2,111 or 14.6 percent from the last , week of May. Of 4,321 veterans getting readjustment allowances, j about 40 percent were expected to ; be without wage credits for 1948, 1 which means that they will be unable to qualify lor state pay ments when and if the G-I pro gram is allowed to expire by Congress. Adequate Labor Supply For State Harvests Nears With cherry and berry picking gradually being completed, the next two weeks will find all sec tions of Oregon with an adequate labor supply for the first time since seasonal harvests began In May. The mid summer farm labor i lull may end about July 15, when i snap-bean harvest will get under way through the Willamette Val ley and around Portland. Eastern Oregon grain, also expected to be ready for action about the samej time, will absorb more workers. ; although no shortage now is ap-; parent. Reports from 18 local and special farm-placement offices of the Oregon State Employment Service showed onlv minor labor shortages during June, and an other peak Is not expected until bean picking begins competition with hops, grains, and late vege tables and fruits for the available supply of workers. A "surplus of labor also has been reported from Montana and Alaska, the employment service reports, and latest Job Informa tion should he obtained before moving to other sections. Bass, Chinook Fishing Good In Lower Umpqua By S. S. SMILEY News-Review Correspondent The bass derby, sponsored by the Lower Umpqua Chamber of Commerce has caused a lot of interest since it started May 15. It will continue until July 15. Some good catches have been made, and an attractive list of prizes has whetted the Interest of the fishermen. No large run of bass has ap peared so far, but there have been fish in the river most of the time for those Interested enough to really fish for them. Just at present, the striped bass are be ing neglected in many cases by fishermen who have learned that the Chinook salmon are quite plentiful in the lower river, near Winchester Bay. For the past 10 days, Chinook fishing has been very good, catches of 20 to 30-pound salmon being quite common and some as large as 40 pounds are being caught. There's a report that a 49-pounder was taken recently. Catches like these arouse the interest of ardent fishermen. Weather conditions are not generally favorable for small boats to cross the bar with safe ty, but fishing is usually good just inside the bar, where it is safer to fish. Some upsets occurred near the bar last year, and while no lives were lost, there were some very narrow escapes. It is difficult to convince peo ple not familiar with the ocean that the name "Pacific" is only a name at times, and that a change in tide or wind can quick ly change smooth water to rough water, and small waves to larger ones. Experienced fishermen try to assist the Coast Guard in watching fishermen who allow themselves to get caught In dan gerous spots. Shad Fishing Closes One of the best shad fishing seasons of recent years for the Umpqua River has just drawn 0 a close and fishermen are clean ing and drying their nets and put ting them away. The latter part of the season saw a lot of moss in the river, making the cleaning of the nets a difficult one. The price, the same as last year, has remained the same throughout the season, at JO cents each for roe shad and three cents each for bucks. fhe season which Just ended did not have the huge runs of shad for a night or two that the ordinary season has, then several nights with almost nothing. In stead, after the shad started to come in, the supply was much steadier and more dependable, and the shad remained excellent in quality right to the end of the season. The netting of Chinook and sil verslde salmon in the Umpqua River is no longer allowed. SLABWOOD In 1 2-1 6 and 24 In. lengths OLD GROWTH FIR DOUBLE LOADS WESTERN BATTERY SEPARATOR Phone S58 Phone 100 If you do not receive your News-Review by 6:15 P.M. call Harold Mobley before 7 P.M. Phone 700 Bank With A Douglas County Institution Home Owned Home Operated Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Douglas County State Bank HOW FAMOUS SWP mm PAINT BRINGS YOW HOME imm mr of mm i Best buy in home protection, for orer 80 years : : ; that s Sherwin-Williems SWP House Paind America's farorite, SWP now brinss you a great big extra bonus btauty that lasts a full year longer than ieorel In its whiter, brighter whites or is Its cleaner, more beautiful colors SWP now gives your home a new, "freshly-painted" look that stays on sod onl SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CHOUSE PAINT Now better than ever before! 1. HONIST-niM-THICKNISSI No deep brush marks : . 3 no weak spots in the filml 2. GUICKI-DtYINOI This new SWP dries before heavy dust can collecd 3.SftOOTHI( SUirACII SVP's smoother, glossier surface doesn't grip dirt! 4. SU'-aiAKSmol Rains keep SWP sparkling bright sad clean! 5. WHirntl MIOHTUtl Whiter whites i : : brighter, more beautiful colors! 6. s avis atom moniyi swp does not requite painting for years! , $80 ' NOW OBIT Gal. in 5-Gal. Lots UMPQUA VALLEY , A Home-Owned and Operated Store 202 N. Jackson Phone 73 Nebraska Is the third largest cattle-producing state. ANNOUNCEMENT General Credit Service, Inc. of Medford, Oregon, announces the purchase of Bonded Collection Services, 201 Douglas County State Bank Bldg. formerly operated by Lillian Compton. Both Offices Will Be Known As: . GENERAL CREDIT SERVICE, INC. Collections and Repossessions in Coos, Curry, Jackson, Josephine and Douglas Counties NATIONAL AFFILIATIONS For Prompt, Efficient Collection Service Phone 763-R GENERAL CREDIT SERVICE, INC. 201 Douglas County State Bank Bldg. Wvnne P. Grler. Pres. M. R. Grler. See, K W. Fitzgerald. Vice-Pres. and Roseburg Branch Manager