4 Tha Ntw-Rtviw, Rotebura, Ort. Tuei., Oct. 11, 1949 Published Dtlly Except Sunday l y tha Naws-levie Company, Inc. lalarat it mn ela.i maltar Mar t. I Katabara.. Orataa. aadar ael al March t. Uli CHARLES V. STANTON -rpr- EDWIN L. KNAPP Editor Mansgar Member of the Associated Press. Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulations aimaa! y K r T MOI I.IDA CO. INC. airier! la Naaj tart, Caleaia. Saa tranciaea Laa AngaUa, Saaltla. ParllaaS. Si. Laala. fUBSIHIr-TION lAIrS la Urataa-rl Mall par taar ISM. ! Itraa aau .M Br -' Carrier-far raar lia.aa ila aSnarak laa tkaa ... ... par maala ll.aY nau.4a Or.ia.-B. Mall-Far aar M .1. ONE READER TO ANOTHER By CHARLES V. STANTON One enjoyable feature of an editor's vacation is that he has opportunity to read a newspaper in a normal manner as if he were a paid subscriber. When we are on the job we seldom actually "read" the paper. As we scan one of the first copies off the press cur mind is not absorbed with the import of the news but rather with the manner of its presentation. We read to determine w heth er news has been prepared properly, whether it could have been more effectively edited, whether it is given the right sort of headlines, whether it is fully appropriate. We have in mind the matter of make-up. We shudder at typographical errors. We look for mechanical mistakes. We succeed in absorbing a limited amount of information, but our reading is neither relaxed nor thorough. But while on vacation we read the hometown paper avidly. We actually seek news. Although we casually observe errors, they do not register their usual impact because, for the time being, there is nothing we can do about them. It is during such periods that we gain better appreciation of the service a hometown newspaper gives its readers. We were exceedingly happy, therefore, to read last week of the words of commendation received by The News-Review during the annual observance of Newspaper Week. We were extremely grateful for the public tribute paid by the Rose burg Elks lodge and the kind words from Mayor Albert Flegel and officers of the lodge. A newspaper, naturally, appreciates words of commenda- dation. Readers of The Newt-Review have been very kind in telling us frequently of their appreciation of the paper and its service. H is indeed gratifying to receive a pat on the back occasionally. Sour Note 'phi Sales Of Federal Timber Planned PORTLAND, Oct. 10 Twenty parcels of O. A C. timber and eight parcels of public domain timber carrying a volume of 51.3 million board feet, plus 5050 lineal feet of western red cedar poles, with an appraised value of $393,067 will be offered Novem ber 7, 8 and 9 by the bureau of land management, according to Daniel L. Goldy, regional admin istrator. Twelve parcels will be sold by sealed bid November 8 at the r- gional administrator's office in Portland. These tracts carrv a volume of 12 million board feet, valued at J.94.161. The remaining Darcela will he offered at oral auctions Novem ber 7 at Roseburg, November 8 at Eugene, and November 9 at Salem. Bear, Shot Four Timet With .22 Gun, Routs Man PORTLAND, Oct. 11. (Pv When William J. Hicks, 41, tells of his encounter with the bear, sweat breaks out on his brow, and he flops back weakly on his pillows. Hicks, a logger near the ML Hood community of Zigzag, shot the bear, four times, last mgnt kept on coming at Hicks.- "He didn't really rush me, but he made a slap at me. I tried to ward It off. I thought he was go ing to get me in the face," said Hicks wanly. The slap cut open his right hand between thumb and fore finger. Hicks got out of there. because bruin had been prowling ; running. His wife and brother around his cabin. (brought him to a Portland hospl- He used only a .22 caliber tal, Hicks said, finishing his story rifle, thaugh. and the bear, estl-1 and collapsing back on the pi, mated to weich 250 pounds, lust lows with a shudder." "I'm sick." One out of four children re peats the first grade, usually tie cause he is -low in learning to read, says a TemDle University professor. In the Museum of Natural His tory In New York, and fac simile thereof at McClure hall at the U. of Oregon. It's approx imately 4 x 7 x 11, and weighs 16 tons. You can see a chip off, I mean a specimen, at the Ever green observatory In Eugene where the Pruetts keep an eye on the stars, and in her spare time (?) Mrs. Pruett helps In answer ing hundreds of letters on her typewriter by her cactus-window. By the way, in mentioning the October FIRST Meteor, I slipped on the date. Sent a special de livery next mail to correct It. October First, of course, is cor rect date. Bonk With A Douglas County Institution ' Home Owned Home Operated Member Federal ' Deposit Insurance) Corp. Douglas County State Bank In the Day's News (Continued from Page One) becoming more imminent with each day that passes. Due to our vacation period coming during Newspaper Week, we missed the opportunity to comment on that event. Perhaps it is just as well, for readers might have be come bored with such discussion. We feel, however, that too few people actually realize how much a newspaper gives them for so little money. If, for instance, you were to receive a telegram contain IT this point, I'd like to suggest V a book for you .to read. Its title Is "Winning Your Way with People." Its author is K. C. Ingram, a former newspaper man, now a vice-president of the Southern Pacific Company. All U ...... . U . .. U ,K. V... 1 . ing the information embraced in any one of the major items !he hammpn home thl, advlce. t W HAT Is wrong with us? Here, I think, Is the answer: WE HAVEN'T YET LEARNED THE TRICK OF GETTING ALONG WITH EACH OTHER. on today's front page just one item it would cost you considerably more than an entire month's newspaper sub scription. Yet in today's issue of The News-Review you are furnished with telegrams from every part of the world messages that would cost you thousands of dollars if col lected individually. If you were to receive a daily letter from a friend, relat ing the happenings that came within his limited knowledge, the postage alone would approximate the monthly subscrip tion price of The News-Review. Your friend, even though he might be one of those per sons with access to all the town gossip, couldn't begin to furnish you the local new collected daily by a staff of trained and experienced reporters who chronicle for you the community's current events. If bur advertisers had to contact you through the mails, or with circulars to your doorstep, you would receive such a conglomeration of material that you would soon begin to protest The advertiser would pay many times the amount of his newspaper space bill, and would have far less favor able readership reaction. The newspaper affords the advertiser an opportunity to present to you his information, news and sales appeal in a form attractive to you, at a time most suiting your own convenience, and in a style you have learned through usage to appreciate. Much could be said about the place of the newspaper in providing information and education and how it serves to keep the American people among the best informed in the world,' or how freedom of speech and the treatment of con troversal subjects by free and open discussion contribute to the welfare of the nation. But these are subjects with which everyone is familiar, if he will but stop to consider them. As a "vacation reader" we were able, during National Newspaper Week, to gain a little better appreciation of newspaper service, because we laid aside for a short time the matter of editorial and mechanical detail. We feel that the newspaper is performing a service which, while ap preciated, often fails to receive full credit for its contri. bution to public welfare. you want to get ahead in the world, LEARN HOW TO GET ALONG WITH PEOPLE, If you have that priceless talent, he says, NOTHING CAN STOP YOU. T LETTERS to the Editor Current Legal Length Of Trout Cited To Anglers ROSEBURG The picture of a thrilled and happy boy holding a salmon half as long as himself, published in The News Review Wednesday. Oct. 5, Is truly satis fying. Tha't lad is well on his way to becoming an ardent sports man, if Indeed he is not one al ready. The last line of the explanation under the picture Indicated, how ever, that someone (perhaps the photographer! Is not tnoroughlv versed In the angling regulations, since reference was made to a ten-inch salmon trout caught by the man who accompanied the successful salmon angler. In the hope of clarifying the regulations and causing all an glers to become familiar with them I would like to point out that the winter angling rules for the Umpqua drainage permit the taking of two fish a day over 11 Inches In length, but not more than four such fish in any seven consecutive days In the following named waters: main Umpqua. in cluding tidewater: North Ump qua. below The Narrows at Kock creek pool; South Umpqua. be low Jackson creek; Calainwia and Elk creeks below Highway !! crossing, and Mill creek. This regulation has been Insti gated to help salmon and steel head anglers avoid unnecessary waste of fish should they acci dentally hook small fish. It was not designed to encourage an gling for trout during the winter season. H. ROSS NFAVCOMB Meld Agent, Umpqua river study. HIS, he asserts, Is the basic rule for getting along with people: "Think, act and speak In terms of the other person's Interests." Then he adds: "Another way of saying It Is 'seek what you want WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF WHAT OTHERS WANT AND THINK.' This philosophy holds that there need be no Irreconcilable conflict of Interests between buyer and seller or between employer and employee." THEN he puts on this cap sheaf: YOU DON'T NECESSARILY HAVE TO OBTAIN SOME THING BY TAKING IT AWAY FROM ANOTHER PERSON. I that this philosophy Is derived from the Golden Rule. This is the Golden Rule: "Do ye unto others as ye would that others shall do unto you." If that rule were followed by all of us, EVERYBODY would be better off. It would pay In dollars and cents. It would pay off in the satisfactions of a TRULY more abundant life. a a a IT would do more than that. It would get for us the SE CURITY that we all crave AND WHICH WILL NOT BE PRO VIDED FOR US BY PRESENT SCHEMES TO VOTE EVERY BODY RICH AND TENSION EVERYBODY OFF. r HIS Is a fact about our Indus trial strife that we can't af ford to Ignore: MODERN INDUSTRIAL STRIFE IS THE FIRST COUSIN OF WAR. Save In exceptional cases, such as our Revolution, war is a de stroyer. Continued long enough, it DESTROYS EVF.nYTH.NG. If our industrial warfare Is con tinued long enough, it will destroy our American way of life. It is often necessary to use two extra tablespoons' of liquid for every cup called for In re gular recipes when using cake flour to bake a cake in a dry climate. To save clothing and mending time, fasten buttons and other fastenings right In the first place. Then ordinary wear or washing and Ironing shouldn't loosen but- ; tons. 1 WALLBOARD Flrtex Sheet rock Masonite PAGE LUMBER & FUEL 164 K. 2nd Ave. S. Phone 24i By Viohnett S. Martin Jf-J One of these days maybe a Boy Scout adventuring over the hills about forty miles from Port Orford, Is going to come across a mass of queer-looking stone. Like as not he will happen to tell his teacher about it, and the science teacher will recall the "Lost Meteor" and well, you finish the pleasant thought as you like. I'll settle for a fund for the boy's education? In some material recently re ceived from Dr. J. Hugh Pruett, the U. of O. extension astronomer (no, I'm not taking a course in that. Dr. Pruett makes It sound very Interesting but stars are way over my head . . .) I was read ing about the Lost Meteor. It seems that scientists have been hunting ever since 1895 for the meteor, of which pieces speci mens, I mean were sent to the east coast by Dr. John Evans. An expedition set out to transfer the mess of which "fully 10,000 kilograms was exposed." But be fore they could reach their ob jective, Dr. Evans, a government geologist, had departed from this present experience without leav ing a record of the exact loca tion. Ninety years ago Dr. Evans said he found the meteor on a grassy slope on a bald mountain forty miles from Port Orford." Of course, says Dr. Pruett, debris may have washed down over the site, burying it; or trees may have covered it; on the other hand, it may be even more exposed. Anyhow, if you happen to beat the Boy Scout of my fan cy to the finding of the Lost Meteor there will be a lot of very pleased scientists. In the meantime, cheer up, the famous Willamette Meteor is safely In captivity, the original) Under . . . blown rock wool Insula tion where it does the most good. Absolutely fireproof too! Our Installations pay for themselves and add value to -our home. You can't afford to be without GOOD Insula tion. Buy from professional insulation men, a Roseburg business: permanent not a dissatisfied customer. 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