4 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore Men., Aug. 29, 1949 Published 0 illy Exeept Sunday ry the Newt-Hevie Company, Inc. Illinl will m.u.r Mir t. f" ' EBbrg, OrtgM eaaar Ml ef March I. IS7S CHARLES V. STANTON rr EOWIN L. KNAPP Editor sla Manager ' Mimbtr of tha Aaaoolated Preaa, Oregon Newapapar Publlahara Association, tha Audit Bureau of Clroulatlona aareieatra at tvrT H(II.I.IDA CO, INC. arflraa la Na fark, Caleaia, Saa traaeiaea Laa Aasalas. aaaUle. rartlaaa St. Laeia aul aiKTKIN BAim-ln Or.i.n-ll. Mall-rar Taar W.aa. ala ajaatsa lt.e, hraa m.alNi KM Br 1lr larrlar Par raar lie.M in ilruul. Il aaa raar. aar mania ll.ee oauiae Orasaa Br Mail Par Mar ee. manias 14 U Inraa aiantbt IS la FREE ENTERPRISE AT WORK "Look, They're Shaking Their Fists At Me!" By CHARLES V. STANTON The publication Norbest Turkey Nem, published at Salt Lake City by Norbest Turkey Growers association, tells of a new method lor marketing turkeys the Turkey hog. Turkey Logr is a long;, cylindrical package of boned turkey meat, tightly packtd and wrapped in special aluminum foil. The Log may be roasted whole, cut into slices, or prepared in many other ways all delicious. The new product, now being marketed in San Francisco, is said to be making a big hit with stewards and caterers of hotels and restaurants. Among the benefits of the new project, Norbest Turkey Newt quotes the following: 1 Low coat boning methods. 2 Tha eomplete utilization of all parta of tha turkey In : ona aingla praduot, except tha neck, extrema wing tipa and , poaaibly tha livr, heart and gizzard. i 3 A compact turkey product which elimlnatee tha uaa ! of virtually all kitchen help required for dreeelng and earv ! Ing tha turkey. 4 Tha retalninq of full-bodied flavor of roaat turkey In - Ita moat auoculent form. 5 Perfect portion control. 6 Reduction of atoraga and freezer apace to approxl. j mately one-fourth that required for New York dreaeed or aviacerated turkeya. I 7 Reduotlon of ahrlnkaga In cooking. 8 Elimination of leftover probleme. j 9 Conservation of food valuea which normally ara j eookad out of tha turkey or loat In vapora and escaped Juices. The announcement contains information that there also has been invented and patented a special roaster which prevents the Turkey Log from expanding and breaking up during the process. One of the major problems in turkey marketing has been disposal of big toms. Too large for average family use, toms were marketed principally through hotels and restaurants. But preparing and serving turkey by existing methods requires considerable labor, while often involving loss, thus creating an obstacle to fast movement of oversize toms. ;The Turkey Log will eliminate all labor of preparation, will be conducive to attractive appearance on the plate, and will eliminate wanfb fcnd loss. Logs may be purchased in quantity and kept frozen until ready for use. Because of reduced bulk, Logs will be more acceptable for storage by individual purchasers. Furthermore, because Turkey Logs may be handled exactly as boned ham is sliced and sold in retail markets, the new product is expected to meet widespread favor from housewives. Here Is an example of private enterprise at work. Turkey growers have had a good product but one which had marketing obstacles. Through cooperative effort, grow ers have been experimenting with methods of eliminating these obstacles and extending market outlets. Finally, ex periments have resulted in a new product expected to sell more turkeys and also produce more profit. Incidentally, it is interesting to note that J. C. Leedy, former Douglas county agricultural agent, and Herbert Beyers, former manager for the Northwest Turkey Growers association at Roseburg, are among those who have been connected with development of improved turkey marketing methods. Packaging is one of the most important factors in success ful marketing of any product. One company manufacturing a processed cereal, for instance, was saved from bankruptcy merely by having its package redesigned to attract the at tention of housewives searching grocery shelves. Now it appears that turkey growers will have a wider outlet for their birds and will be assured better prices be cause tiiey have found a method of improving consumer acceptability. Lumber manufacturers are doing much experimentation on packaging getting a higher price for their product be cause they form it to meet customer needs. Even a' newspaper must have attractive "packaging" if it is to prosper, vhich is why newspapers are constantly striving to improve appearance and display. The more at tractive a newspaper is to the eye, the more convenient to read, the better it sells. That is the free enterprise system constantly striving for a better product. Is there anyone foolish enough to believe we would have all this reasearch, experimentation, catering to consumer tastes, etc., if we socialized all industry and business as so many people are hdvixnting? BV Viahnett S. Martin JjJ Carl Jouhola, Reedsport Fisherman, Death Told Carl J. Jauhola of Reedsport riled at the Keizer hospital in North Bend Tuesday. Aug. .'3, following a long Illness. Mr. Jau hola was born In Karungl. Kin land, on June 10. 1K85. He had been In the United States 43 years, and In Oregon 36 years. Me is survived by his widow, Hil da. Well known as a fisherman, both a Rlllnctter In the I'mpqua River when the seasons permit ted, and an outside (roller durine the summer months, when small boats can be used for this pur pose, Carl was also known as a musician, having been an ac complished violinist. Funeral services were held at the Unger chapel In Reedsport Friday at 2 p.m.. with interment In the Reedsport Masonic cemetery. DRIVERS EXAMS DATED A driver's license examiner will be on duty in the Row-burg cltv hall Sept. 1-2 between 9 a. m. and 5 p. m., according to an announce ment from Secretary of Stale Newbry'a office. I wonder what It will be like to fish In Oregon coastal waters? Supposing, of course, we get be yond the bar. The skipper assured me that he doesn't take passen gers out beyond the bar If it's rough out there, although he might go, under some conditions, without them. "Feel I can do as I like with my own life, but other people's well, that's another matter." Wonder If I shall see that whale the News-Review reported as having been disporting itself off the mouth of the Umpqua? Since we shall be trolling all the time the sights will be different of course. , . I remember watch ing a seal gambol in the water, doing every sort of trick, with Just one appreciative watcher. Everybody else wanted to catch fish! I like to catch fish but Just the "ride" gives me my money's worth any fish make the Icing on the cake! Wonder If mackerel will grab bait oh, we don't have bait. I have never fished for salmon! and have done little trolling. The boats we used to go on would drop anchor and up anchor again and try another spot If no luck. There was the day every body was In a dither over a lucky fisherman's "bite." Slowly he hauled up the huge "fish" 300 feet off bottom a full sized bed spring! There was the day some body left his rod and line, and a "bite" yanked It overboard while he was gone. He had rent ed tackle from the skipper. He paid up, rented another outfit. Within an hour he hauled in the outfit he had lost! Things like that make for merriment. There was the day somebody hauled up a "sea spider" hor rible looking thing, a foot acvoss, looking Just like you'd think It would look. When the excite ment subsided I went Into the cabin tp rest a bit EJ had prom ised to call me if I had a bite. In due time I had "something on the "line!" I rushed out and reeled . . . and reeled ... no, he wouldn't help me! I had to land whatever was on my own line. No one else offered any help, although my efforts were given full attention. You guessed it . . . EJ had hung that beastly sea spide on my line and dropped it over the side! Editorial Comment From The Oregon Press William the Conqueror, who le-1 feated the English in 1066 at the i Battle of Hastings, brought with I him smiths skilled as horseshoers : and armorers. ' One hundred fourteen thousand tons .if spinach were shipped fresh to markets In the United Slate. In 1948. MANY EXPERIMENTS ON MILL WASTE (Medford Mail Tribune) Mention was made here recent ly of experiments now under way to produce charcoal from wood waiite and It was observed that success of the effort might mean much here where there is a large amount of such waste and where the burning of same creates a bad smoke and cinder condition. It has -.Ince been learned that the Oregon Forest Products Lab oratory, operated by Oregon Slate college, with the support of private lumber operators and state funds, is also carrying on or will soon have under way more than 40 research projects looking to new uses for waste wood in manufacture of profit able products. Other such experiments are be ing carried on by the Western Pine Association laboratory In Portland, by the U. S. Finest Products Laboratory at Madison. Wis., and by some of the larger timber companies. Making of molasses from wood waste Is currently under way in the laboratory at Madison. The director of that laboratory, speaking recently In Kosebuig. sal that if every cow in the Unit ed States was given the recom mended feeding of three pounds of molasses dally, there would not be sufficient wood waste in the entire country to supply the market. Th molasses, he said, is also good food for poultry of all kinds as well as sheep and other livestock. There Is also a large field In industrial use. all of which makes the market for mo lasses almost unlimited. There Is a fly In the molasses, however. In the shape of a ques llon as to whether molasses made from wood waste can compote profitably with the produce lm (xirted from Cuba and Hawaii. The nation's tannin and wax supplies may some day come from IHniglas fir trees, scientists believe. Already their experi ments In which shredded hark Is mixed with benzene and the sol vent run through extracting and evaporating machines, have pro duced both wax and tannin. The residue is a mixture of cork and wood fibres that can be sepa rated, refined and used as soil conditioners, In making plastics, or ground into powders for mix ins' wi'h insecticide!.. A process for extracting resin from pine stumps has been com pleted by the Western Pine As sociation in Portland and if it proves economically feasible, should mean the Northwest's pa per manufacturing Industry will no longer be dependent on the South for resins for siring. The Portland laboratory has j perfected a new pressed board i called "Staypak," utilizing white fir which is found in western pine forests but which was ignored in prewar lumbering. A piece of , Staypak is said to feel as hard anu lu-avy as a smoom piece oi slate and can be used for tool and knife handles, shuttles, floors for bowling alleys, furniture, pan eling and signs. Sawdust, blended with plastics and resins and molded together under heat and pressure, is the main Ingredient of a colorful top ping for tables, counters, panels and diainboards being manufac tured by a Sacramento concern. The Weyerhaeuser Timber Co.. at Uingview. Wash., started its research back In 1942 mainly as a wartime effort seeking a "suo stitute for imported cork. The company Is now turning out five product under the name of Sil vacon, and soon a sixth, a wood wool, will be announced. Other commercial use of mill and logging waste is a liquid compound for removing boiler rust, and in the making of lam inated timbers for mines. the flood line of the reservoir. Consolidated Builders, the con tractors, are providing housing for their principal workers at Mill City and will transport them to and from .he site of the work. As related In the news story In Friday's Statesman, written by Managing Editor Wendell Webb, Mongold will be under water when the reservoir is filled. It is above the level necessitated by the flood control feature of the dam as first authorized, but be low the level of the pool to lie backed up to provide for the pow er feature added later. What is difficult to understand Is why this contingency was not foreseen. Power has for many years been considered in connection with the Detroit dam. In August of 1942 this writer accompanied the late Senator Charles L. McNary and Col. Cecil Moore, then division engineer for the corps, to view the dam site. Serious considera tion was being given then to ad vance the construction of the dam In order to augment the power supply. When the highway was relocated It was hung at lev els above the power dam. While it is true that the first authoriza tion was for a flocd control dam, the army engineers came back at the next session of congress and got approval of the higher dam for power-generating pur poses. It would seem that a mini mum of foresight would have in dicated the wisdom of locating Mongold above the "high water mark." It Is mistakes like this which weaken public confidence in of ficials charged with responsibil ity for the spending of money. The army in particular is under suspicion because of its wartime extravagances. We do not want to see repeated In peacetime the wastefulness which was excused by the haste attendant on war making. Mongold was the name picked to honor an engineer in the corps. It will live briefly as a .name for a mistake of the corps of engineers. In the Day's News (Continued From r'age One) head for Palm Beach and Miami as Instinctively at the swallows head for San Juan Caplstrano in the spring. There l( this difference: The qulek-and-easy money East erners head for Florida's Gold Coast to show off their new wealth. The swallows go to Capls trano to mate, build home and rear families. e THIS dispatch is from Washington: 'Some of President Truman'i closest friends predicted today he won't let it be known until after the 1950 congressional elections whether he will run again." That's a sure sign that we have passed one Presidential election and are beginning to get ready for another one. a MY personal opinion is that AT THE PRESENT MOMENT Harry Truman doesn't want to run again. I'll add that I think he WILL run again. Why? Well, the pressure on a Presi dent to run and run and keep on running is well-nigh Irresistible. For one thing, the habit of power grows on people. For another, the Jobs of several million people de pend on the Incumbent of the White House. The pressure they put on him to run again, so tha. they won't be thrown back into the cold, clammy muck of private life, is too great to be measured by any existing instrument of precision, aaa THE situation has another element: Men who hold positions of re sponsibility and authority fall inevitably Into the belief (sincere, so far as they are concerned) that NOBODY ELSE CAN DO THE JOB AS WELL AS THEY. SO far as I'm concerned, I hope we add to our constitution an amendment forbidding any Presi dent to hold more than two terms. It seems to me that one of his tory's clearest lessons is that too much power, held in too few hands too long is the most danger our of all threats to the liberties of the people. I REMEMBER clearly a certain chamber of commerce in Ore gon (which I shall not name here) whose affairs were admin istered for many, many years by a little group of able, public spirited men. They were so good and held so completely the confi dence of their townspeople that they were returned to office year after year. EVENTUALLY they became too old (or too busy with their own affairs) to go on functioning. Because no new blood had been brought in, there was no one to fall back on at the moment. The organization disbanded and for two years the town had no cham ber of commerce. Northwest Tree Seed Crop Above MONCOLO AN ERROR (The Oregon Statesman) I The explanation given for the abandonment of Mongold Is a bit ' hard to accept. Mongold is the construction camp built by the; armv engineers to house worker i on the IVtroit dam. It is to be! abandoned with verv little use. ! after an investment of about half I a million dollars has been made I there, because It Is located below I CURBING DRUNKEN DRIVING (Coos Bay Times I Announcement from the office of the secretary of state of a campaign to curtail drunken driving in Oregon should meet with approval from all who have concern for the public safety. Given prominence in Salem ac counts of the proposal is a plan seeking the elimination of the practice attributed to some Judges of recommending rein statement of drivers' licenses which the same Judges have re voked afler drivers have been found guilty of drunken driving. This curb would be exercised bv a board of review which would pass on all applications and rec ommendations for the restoration of suspended drivers' licenses. A record of numerous convictions, it is stated, would cause the board to recommend against the restoration of a license. A program to control drunken driving calls for stern measures which will either influence the guilty ones to abstain from op erating a motor vehicle when there is a chance that the drinK ing of intoxicants might Influence-his driving or bar him from driving under any circumstance. Stiff fines may do the trick wit r some. Some might be deterred by the publicity given convictions for drunken driving. The suspen sion of a driver's license for a year is a serious punishment to many, particularly in days of de pendence upon motor transpor tation to get to and from work. Of late, it has been noticed that more Judges have taken to han ding Jail sentences to drunken drivers without suspending the jail term on payment of fines. All of these forms of punishment do have their effect upon the amines of those convicted. In: some rases seriously affecting the family welfare both econo-1 mically and socially. It is too; had that such should be the case 1 but it should not be allowed to cause ua to lose sight of the greater suffering that drunken drivers all too frequently bring to others in accidents that wipe out lives or cause long weeks, monlhs. even years of suffering In hospital beds, perhaps life-long disability. We cannot afford to be sentimental about drunken driving. It is to be hoped that the program announced by the secretary of state will be follow ed out with the realism which is demanded. HOUSING DECONTROL NECESSARY (Salem Capital Journal) President Truman blames the lifting of rental controls In areas still having them on congress' failure to provide sufficient ap propriations to enforce the rent control law. Every compulsory regulative law requires an armv of enforcement olficers and the expenditures of tax money re quired by the bureaucracy in en forcing regimentation frequently exceeds the benefits resulting, which has been demonstrated in rental control, which has been honey-combed by favoritism and evasion, and has largely been a lopsided farce. Rental controls, like other ar bitrary controls, are part and parcel of the police state. Justi fiable perhaps in war time and emergency periods. It is time the economic law of supply and de mand be given a chance to solve the rental problem, especially since the building boom is still mushrooming all over the coun try and sufficient rental housing exists or soon will. In view of the lact that federal costs n time of peace will exceed revenues by $5 billion this fiscal year, and that the government is now on a deficit spending ba sis, economy is essential, especi ally with a world record debt of $L'S2 billion already existing. There is no better place to start the economizing than in these surplus unnecessary federal bu reaus. As it is. congress has only cut the housing budget from S26 million to $17.5 million so why the presidential squawk? PRUDENTIAL LIFI Insurance HORACE C. etRO Spacial Agent 111 W-tt Oak Offia 712 J Pes. 171 -J FOREST SEED CROP ABOVE AVERAGE ' Ttmberland owneri and forest er! will be relieved to learn that seed crops for the commercially important tree species are better than average this year, accord ing to J. A. Hall, director of the Pacific Northwest forest and range experiment station, Port- T.-.. .Hiapgl IfM la nflSt lit- inuu. rw, o ' ' J - --- tie or ni s-ed war produced in me raciiic rsuruiweai Hall stated that reports from the IT C fnro.1 uinjifa rfltlPPr dis- tricts indicate medium crops with an occasional arjunaar.i crop mi IVtiieriaa fir urMtrrn hemlock and western red cedar all along the west slope oi tne cascade moun tains from Mt. Baker in Wash- l.nt.n .nutVl tt thjl KickivOUK in Oregon, with an occasional sim ilar report or tnese species where thev occur along the coast and east of the Cascade Range. PAnHomcB ninii la nrndlirinff nn average or better croo over its entire range except in the ex treme northern part of the State of Washington, but the prospects lor a seeu crop iui mis Byn---a for next year are poor. Noble and silver fir that occur at the hih.i. alat;flllnnc in th CaSCA-ie an1 Cnaat Vf mint aina fllan silOW consistently medium or abundant crops. SlIKa snruce is Droaucing medium and abundant crops along the coast of Oregon and Washington and medium and abundant crops are also shown for Port Orford white cedar in ita natural range on the southern Or egon coast. The occurrence Tf tree seed crops has been found to be rath er irregular &nd unpredictable, heavy and medium crops occur ring only at 3-to-7-year Intervals. However, It has been learned that under correct storage conditions these seeds can be held several years without loss oi germination ability. "It is probable that seed collector will take advantage of the current year's croo to pre Dare for the lean years to come, ' Hall stated. Black pearls are very valua ble because they are rare. Phone 100 . If you do not recalva your News-Review by 6:15 P.M. call Harold Mobley before 7 P.M. Phone 100 Soon You Will Need a NEW ROOF Let The COEN SUPPLY COMPANY Give You An Estimate Phone 121 Everything For The Builder Floed t Mill Sts. Bank With A Douglas County Institution Home Owned Home Operated Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Douglas County State Bank .0 (jfuklucktll f "7 I The fliai0f automatic washer gets your clothes clean! Lucky you if you've waited for the wonderful MayUfi Automatic wash er. For th is automatic washes clothes really clean. They're ready for the line in just 25 min utea. See a demonstra tion today! 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