4 The Newt-Review, Reuburg, Or Mon., Sept. 26, .94 Published D illy Except Sunday ty the Nw-Rvie Company, Ine. Iiunl -fm4 el alar Mar I. let II l fail elMa KMbrg. Oragaa, aafar act ef Mareh t. 1111 CHARLES V. STANTON -p.. EOWIN L. KNAPP Editor "iJr Manager Member of tha Aieoelatec! Praaa, Oregon Nawapapar Publisher Aaaoolatlon. tha Audit Bureau of Circulation aareaae a rT-MOLi.iDAr CO., inc. arn-.. ia n. tar. Ckicasa. eia araaclaaa L.. .. aaiua. r.m.ai at. Laala. tuBacaiPTiuN lArra-ia imi-i mil rt t.i. aa.aa, .1. a.ath, . ttraa t.M B Clli lircltr rf 7r lo.e He aaaaaeal. lau i laaa laa rl.r aM aiVaUi ll.aV Oatiiee Ofaaa Sr Malt-far ae. Maalbt 14 fa. rtraa aianlka li lt JUSTIFIABLE COMPLAINT By CHARLES V. STANTON Mr. William Person, resident of Wilbur, and a News Review reader of 18 years standing, has some complaints about highway conditions complaints in which we join wholeheartedly. Mr. Person lists "Gripe No. 1" as follows : Recently a car waa crowded Into tha railing on Wlncheatar bridge. It would ba a vary great help if tha yellow Una were to ba kept painted. There la aeldom a week that aoma ear doaan't hit tha railing. Juat walk acroaa tha bridge and ae what a beating thoaa railing take. Try t figure eut what damage raaulta to cara. It ia very hard to know Juat how cloaa one may ba to tha railing when there ia no yellow lino to act aa a guide. Not long ago a produce truck hit tha railing and watermelon wra scattered from one end of tha bridge to tha . other. Mr. Person also has another complaint which he lists as "Gripe No. 2." It concerns sawmills and business houses that install unshaded flood lights to shine into the eyes of approaching drivers, blinding them to traffic. He urged that all such lights be shielded on the highway side. We hear a great deal about traffic accidents. Caution to motorists is voiced by many officials and agencies. Yet many small factors contributing to accidents go untended year after year auch items as the unshielded lights, to which Mr. Person refers; a clump of bushes on a sharp turn, a curve lacking a guard rail, a slick patch of non-skid pavement (how well we know!), a narrow, unmarked cul vert, inadequate pedestrian paths and lanes. How many accidents have resulted from such conditions, only to be listed as too much speed, loss of control, etc.? Each spring highway crews renew the yellow line mark ing the center of the highway. During the summer, when the line is least important, it is brightly visible. But by the first dreary days of winter that safety line has become so obscured that it is of little value and, during most of the dark, wet, foggy months, we grope along highways unable to find enough of the center line to serve our need. The State of Oregon has many thousands of miles of high ways on which the center line is marked, and it must cost a large sum of money every year to do the necessary paint ing, but, in our opinion, no one act would serve to lessen highway accidents more than frequent painting of the center guide line. Along the entire length of the Pacific highway, drivers frequently must face bright, unshielded floodlights at mills, motels, restaurants, and other bright spots. Facing these lights, particularly on a wet night, vision of the roadway is so badly impaired that drivers frequently get into trouble. Many accidents could be avoided by the simple expedient of shielding such lights on the highway side. Many months ago, through continued harping, we suc ceeded in getting lights installed on Winchester and North Jackson streets in Roseburg to illuminate the spur tracks, after several cars had been damaged and persons injured in collisions with freight trains. But when the lights were installed, shades were so placed as to direct a cone of light downward. Little illumination falls on the tracks. We have tried time and again to have this matter corrected. A workman with a pair of tin snips to trim away a portion of the shade on the railroad side of each light could increase the safety margin most materially.- But to date all we have obtained has been promises. The lights still are inefficient. As one drives along our highways, and particularly our county roads, he finds spot after spot where trimming a clump of brush would improve visibility. We occasionally find a spot where a road has been widened but a culvert is left narrower than the road, offering an invitation to acci dent. Dozens of other minor conditions conditions which could be corrected easily might be cited. It is our opinion that each city, county and the state gov ernment should have mon especially appointed to hunt out and correct these conditions. A man definitely assigned to the task could be looking for traffic hazards while going about regular duties; it would not be necessary to hire extra help. On Your Mark, Get Set ...... Bit Viahnett S. Marti 4 -J READERS ASD EDITOR TO GET VACATION Readers of this column will have a vacation for the next couple of weeks from our views and comments. We have finally succeeded in finding a vacation period. Being too lazy to prepare copy in advance, we will permit this space to be used for other purposes during our absence. From Mr. Algernon Bltwun's point of view their fireplace is Incomplete. Not ao from Mr. Blt wun's. Maybe that la because Mrs. B remembers fenders and hobs and receptacles for fuel accompanying the fireplaces at which she warmed her feet, or toasted crumpets. Mr. B can see no sense in a fender clutter ing up the hearth (so the fam ily hand me down of solid brass accumulates corrosion In the woodshed), and neither can he see why a man should order a. 42-inch fireplace unit .so as' 'to have a good big fire, then fill up that space with a mess of bricks? HOB, huh! Mr. B doesn't think It Is part of a woman' work to lug in wood, so before leaving each morning he always sees to it that there is plenty on hand, neatly stacked up against the right hand half of the bricks, on the cement hearth. Could Mrs.! B fall to appreciate this? Of course not! Once Mrs. B did have a bright idea; she invested in a small green cart which would solve the wood problem. "What wood J Mrs. B yearned for a HOB. On It she vlsloned a teakettle cheer ily' singing its song, and some thing or other keeping hot. "What's the matter with the elec tric range?" asked Mr. B In a puzzled way, "Gosh, It only takes a minute to boll the kettle there, and it doesn't get all soot either." One evening. Mrs. B delighted ly handed her husband a leaflet received In the mall that day: "Fireplace HOBS, Their Use and How to Make Therrt." The pic ture showed, Mrs. B remarked, the housewife putting the teapot on the hearth to keep It warm, while Friend Husband stood smil ing, over his cup of tea ... . "I sent to the Standard Insur ance Co.,. Portland, for it." Mr. B studied the picture. Told Mrs. B if that guy's cup Is full of tea, I'll drink it and heaven knout I hate tea! His cup Is EMPTY. She's picking up the teapot. Mr. B counted the four sticks of wood and wondered how long it would be with a Hie like that before Mrs. B would freeze slap to death. IVcxt he counted the bricks, computed the amount of pace the hobs would night in the foreseeable future. When I came down to break fast, the mess was immersed in the morning papers WHOSE HEADLINES FAIRLY SCREAMED THE NEWS OF THE ATOM BOMB. It was a grim and FRIGHT ENED company. .We knew the Japs were doomed and peace was in sight. BUT WHAT OF THIS NEW AND GRISLY HORROR THAT HAD JUST COME INTO THE WORLD? Would life for any of us ever be the same again? f staggering news that Russia must have the bomb ... If RUS SIA has the bomb, the likelihood that it will be USED ... il it IS used, what next? a a ' ELL, about all I can say Is WELL this: After Pearl Harbor Day, after Hiroshima Day, I am still alive and my country is still Intact and competent. Life still goes on, much as it did before these epochal events. People age and die In their beds. Babies are born. We faced Pearl Harbor Day and carried on. We faced Atom Bomb Day and carried on. We can face the knowledge that Rus. sia probably has The Bomb and still carry on. We can because we have to. problem?" asked Mr. B glancing j take from the 42-inches he had up briefly away from the News- Insisted upon having . . . read Review. The little cart had Its a part of the detailed directions use, but solving the wood prob- Inside the leaflet, lem did not prove to b one of j "Hm-m-m" said Mr. B pick them. Ing up the News-Review again. SOVIET BOOMS DICKENS MOSCOW .vThe Slate Pub 1'shlng House of Literature has re'eased Charles Dickens' Ameri can Notes. "Evening Moscow," reporting this, said Dickens de scribes how quickly his illusions rbout the so-called "American paiadise" were dispelled. In the Day's News and the price of eggs and butter. Today such things are trivialities. (Continued from Page One) ATOMIC-E XPLOSION OC CURRED IN THE U. S. S. R. I Russia I. I l.MOST simultaneously I came from London official YESTERDAY, so far as we ordi nary people knew, WE ALONE had the atom bomb. I Everybody knew that we would j use It only as a last resort to pre there serve our national existence. To day we must assume that Russia WASHINGTON, Sept. 26. -.Pi The Senate is scheduled to vote Senate Postpones Vott On Military Pay Boost ulr today on a proosed $300,000,000 military pay boost. The House approved a similar bill June 15. It would raise the pav of almost every rank from private to major general. Speaking In support of the measure yesterday, Senator Chapman (DKy) told his col leagues that "we still stand In the shadow of war" and there fore must be prepared. ' He said there will be a pro gressive decline in the caliber of the nation's defence forces unless the pay is made more attrac tive. The bill is expected to meet only scattered ODposition when it comes up for a vote. Other legislation to boost sal aries of cabinet member and government worker making over $5,000 is scheduled for Sen ate consideration as soon as the military pay bill 1 out of the way. Strong opposition to this al ready has appeared. Lightning Bolt Kills Two Children At Play DU BOIS, Pa., Sept. 26. t.Pi A bolt of lightning crashed Into a group of children plavlng In a grade school yard during the noon lunch recess. Two were kill- word that the British government : also has the bomb. THERE ARE also has evidence of an atomic ex- j FEW WHO DOUBT THAT RUS plosion In Russia. !RIA WILL USE THE BOMB AS a a a AX INSTRUMENT TO ACHIEVE FT'S keen th. picture rtoar If HER GOAL OF A COMMUNIST L we can. I think the President s : WORLD. announcement came as no sur-1 That Is what changes the face prise to most of those to whom he of affairs. made it. WHATEVER HAP-1 PEN ED DIDN'T HAPPEN JUST YESTERDAY. The first evidence must have come in some time ago. It was kept as a hush-hush secret. But by last Thursday evening the I HOPE you will pardon the use of the first personal pronoun in what follows. To each of us these cataclysmic developments are PERSONAL. Three times within the past decade the world proof must have accumulated to has been changed for me. I can the point where the fact was recognized that It could no longer be kept a secret. THE PEOPLE MUST KNOW. So the cabinet meeting was ar- tell about terms. it best In personal T' ed and four were stunned by the 1 ranged and the announcement bolj- was made. (Please keep In mind in- victims were jimmy r'ros ke. 11. and John Hillard. 11. Deputy Coroner F. I. Gillung said the lightning went down the school chimney and then traveled out on the wot grass of the play ground where the children were playing yesterday. The bolt struck following a heavy rainstorm. The original forest area of the United States is estimated a t 820.000,000 acres In addition t e 100.000.000 acrea of non-commercial forest. The present area of forest i estimated at 41.0-1.000 acre. HE morning of December 7. I spent hunting ducks out on the swamp. The ducks were numerous and they flew low. that I don't know all this. I'm Just ; It was wonderful. This was a good assuming it. It's the way such old world to live in. We came In, things are usually handled. It's all aglow. Just before noon, about the only way they can be THE JAPS HAD BOMBED handled.) PEARL HARBOR AND WE i WERE AT WAR! NYWAY I a a A Only yesterday we were talk- - THE night of Hiroshima Day I Ing about such things as the de-1 valuation of the British pound the harvesting of the 1!M9 crop . . . the coal strike and the Im pending steel strike . . . the weather . . . the state of business T spent In my quarters In Lon don, sleeping soundly In a city that was still deliriously happy because it knew there was peace In Europe and no enemy bombs would fall that night or any other The ifMwrri to evirvday insurant, e problm By KEN BAILEY QUESTION: We plan to leave on a long vacation motor trip w ithin the next couple of weeks and a friend suggests that we take out a special theft insur ance policy on our luggage, jewelry and other valuables which we take with us. Can you tell me whether we can get a short term policy of this kind and whether its cost is low enough so it would pay us to huv It? ANSWER: Ordinarily, if you already have a Residence Theft policy on your valuables, the simplest and most economical thing for you to do would be to have the "theft awav from the premises" clause addetoi and to pay the small additional premium." This coverage is usually a good deal broader than that given by a "personal effects'' floater policy which you would buy for the duration of your trip. If you don't have a Residence Theft policy, you should consult your Insurance agent about it before buying any other form of Insurance. aIf ymril ad1v.a mir own mnr m-a qur.tloni In thit offu-. w 11 Irv to lva nu lha .-orwl answer and lhare will ha aa hars ar abll gallaa at aajr Mat. KEN BAILEY INSURANCE AGENCY 315 Pacific Bldg. Phone 398 Victims Charms Result In Arrest Of Holdup Men NEW YORK. Sept. 26 OP) Two alleged holdup men were in Jail today because of the charms of their victim and romantic il lusions. Police said the pair Invaded the apartment of pretty New York Model Donna Lee Law rence, 22, and left with several hundred dollars worth of loot and a yen to see their victim again. In fact, police said, the yen was so strong that the men, one at a time, telephoned Miss Law rence for dates Friday, and of fered to return her property. At the suggestion of the police, she said okay. She was on hand for the trysts, one in her apartment and the other at a West 48th street bar and grill. Police were on hand too. and arrested the suspects. They were identified as Sabato Glannotti, 27, and John Carfa gino, 31, both ex-convicts on pa role. Both were booked for as sault, robbery and illegal posses sions of weapons. Giannotti also was charged with rape. A third man. who hadn't vet yielded to his romantic impulses, was Doing sougnt. Police said the three entered Miss Lawrence's 64th street apart ment inursaay, tied her wrists and stole S160, a $.)00 watch, sev eral rings and a cigarette lighter. foliee said Giannotti also raped the brunette Miss Lawrence, a divorcee. Elkton By PHYLLIS A. SMITH Visitors at the L. L. Holcomb home included a nephew of Mr. Holcomb, Donald Reat, who left this week for the University of Washington where he is in his final year. Other relatives visit ing with the Holeombs are Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tavlor and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Reat, all of Se attle, Wash., and Mr. and Mrs. Al Keitchell and children of Oak land, aClif. Miss Shirley Knypstra left Mon day to attend the Monmouth normal school. Miss Donna Lee Winterbotham has gone to Ash land to attend the normal school there. Mrs. L. M. Smith has received word of the death of her step mother, Mrs. Addie Sprague Hen derer, on Sept. 17. Mrs. Clara Smith Rhinehart has moved to Cottage Grove. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Slagle vis ited with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mc Cullem this week. The Slagles are operating a small restaurant at Gold Hill. Miss Evelyn Hudson spoke at the Coos and Curry Teeners Institute Thursday. Daylight Saving Time Will End In Portland PORTLAND, Sept 2 Daylight aaving ended In Ore gon. The last citiee remaining on fast time set clocks back an hour, most following Portland's lead in changing th hands at 1:50 a. m. PAKISTAN GRADUATES BOOST U. 8. KARACHI (JP) Pakistani alumni of American universities nere nave tormed a society for promoting the cultural and edu cational relations between the two countries. The society is arranging a se ries of public lectures on the var ious aspects of life in Ihe AmerU can universities. SMALL BOV DROWNS DARRINGTON, Wash. (.m Jack Rav Adams, three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carlson of Darrington, drowned in a mill pond here Friday night after hav ing been left in the cab of a truck by his stepfather. FHONE 100 between 6.15 and 7 p. ni., if you have not received your News Review. Aik Jor Harold Mobley. Roseburg Man Serving In Landing Operations Hugh M. Bechtold. chief en- glneman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Bechtold of 340 West Second avenue N.. Roseburg, is serving as a crew member aboard the landing ship USS 1138, which is participating this fall In "Op eration Miki," a large-scale am phibious exercise in the Pacific. The maneuvers, scheduled for late September, October and No vember, involve nearly 40,000 soldiers, sailors and marines, and are designed to dislodge an imaginary "aggressor" force from the Hawaiian Islands. Gen eral Mark W. Clark, commanding general of the Sixth Army, is overall commander. Before entering the Navy In October, 1939, Bechtold attended San Bernardino High School, San Bernardino, Calif. General Logging Supplies mm3 0 Skookum Blocks 0 Mall Power Saws Lincoln Welder Coos King Donkey Wire Rope Disston Power Saw Lincoln Welding Rod Waco Wheel Arch Expert Sled Builder Available Anytime 0 Splicing and Ferrule Work f) Expert Saw Mechanic PITCO of ROSEBURG, Ltd. Phon 733 L 1819 N. Stephens Evenings Phon 1241-R Attlee Says Inflation To Wipe Out Benefits LLANDUDNO, Wales () Prime Minister Attlee Saturday told Britons that inflation threat ens to wipe out the benefits of cheapening the pound. "There is no occasion for gen eral price increases," he declared. "It is the duty of every good citizen to cooperate with the gov ernment in preventing inflation." In a speech prepared for a Labor party rally here, the prime minister said his government is more than ever determined to hold down prices, wages and profits. Bank With A Douglas County Institution Home Owned Home Operated Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Douglas County State Bank Vt j dr- v. . 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