The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 13, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    4 Tht Newi-Rtview, Roseburo, Ore. Thurs., Oct. 13, 1949
Published 0 illy Except Sunday f y the
News-Revie Compony, Inc.
Imril ..! m.lt.I M. 1, !!. lb. foil !
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CHARLE8 V. STANTON JT
Editor $5
EDWIN L. KNAPP
Editor -u Manager
Member of the Aetoclated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publisher
Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulations
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Mentha II. is. iSr.a an.nlba 13.1
BACK FROM VACATION
By CHARLES V. STANTON
Many of our friends have been asking us about our vaca
tion. We realize, of course, that they're not in the least in
terested and are only trying to be polite. Hut give a person
a chance to talk about his vacation or his operation and
he's off.
We speak of our vacation particularly, however, because
it was DIFFERENT.
We have no sunburn. We haven't a mosquito bite. We
have no broken bones, no bruises, no aching head, no hang
over. In only one way does our return from vacation follow
the normal pattern we're too tired to work.
But our tiredness docs not stem from overexertion, driv
ing too long or too hard, late hours, or any of the usual
causes.
We became exhausted watching the wife work.
You see, after spending a few days at the coast fishing,
without in the least damaging future salmon runs in any of
our coastal streams, we returned home and spent a week eat
ing and sleeping going to bed early and getting up late.
Unfortunately for us, the wife selected that week to give
the house a thorough cleaning one of those peculiar things
that women seem to do so often without any apparent reason
or cause.
Being on vacation, of course, we were not expected to
help and didn't.
But, now we're desperately tired from watching the wife
work so hard.
We said we didn't help.
That's not entirely correct. We did TRY.
The wife decided she wanted to redecorate a couple of
rooms ceilings, walls and woodwork.
We volunteered to paint the ceilings.
That shouldn't be too much of a job for a guy able to
whip a Bix-ounce flyrod, equipped with a heavy steelhead
reel and double-tapered line, for six and eight hours at a
stretch. The stance and action are closely parallel so we
thought, having had no previous experience in the decorat
ing art.
Oh well, we had an old uncle by marriage who had a pet
saying that a man was a darned fool if he couldn't learn
something every day.
We learned!
But after the wife started cleaning up the mess we made
we began to have doubts that we saved her any labor.
Our fishing during this vacation was brief and not too
fruitful.
We traveled a good many miles on a hard boat seat, drag
ging polished pieces of hardware through the water, while
salmon leaped in joyous abandon on all sides. But we don't
have any cops looking for us because we broke any legal
limits.
We didn't go hunting. We were invited, but turned down
the invitation, in spite of the fact that we were given a
solemn promise we wouldn't have to pack out a deer even if
we killed one.
The last deer we killed had to be carried out over endless
miles of brush and through thick timber no trail and we
made a vow of never again a vow we have kept religiously.
We found that playing pinochle with the boys at the ffK
club produces just as effective blisters as riding the board ally verv poor,
seat of a trolling skiff. We didn't go hunting, but we re- vorervoruCunfo
ceived a gift of a bnckstrap and a delicious piece of roasting , doubt found that to he true,
meat. We visited the home of a friend and had a fine dinner j T'IZ
with fresh crab cocktail and salmon loaf, without any of "Hill" Won-all is handling the
the labor raking crabs or landing salmon. As we said! we '7. V pmrnp,
went to bed early and arose late, vet we fared as well as if rmn-ieous and he is doing every
we'd had successful hunting and fishing trips. j '"'""J;; 7hVVh,'Vo,ir
So we've returned to the office with none of those sorious i disti -.tuition representative in'this
district Helps him in any way he
ran (in earninqs especially! and
also in seeing that always, when
at all possible, he jjeis his pa
pers on lime. That way ne'll have
a better chance to keep tip his
good work and you will be able
to develop a bigger business here
A Triumph of Something or Other
ivjy-yr f" I'LL UKl A LdT Of Wet (
f z?SZ J, 7 Yo CON'T TAke CABe
l y UKf"- . Jr I 1hi4 Thing. Be A cooo
57 Af-HP
aft m?Lsfy
I iMEM CQMEiTHB NEXT YeAR - JJj7
t AHpThb FOLLOWING YeAR- vptf J
anpThb YeA(? after That- r
Kj
ANOTHB - YEP YtXJ GUESSED it. -Lmmmm. - -
HOW ITS A PMAnT
(ffiftfoffi r-il Viahnett S. Martin Jfj y '
Add to the sights to he seen on
our favorite drive, Highway 38,
along the Umpqua only this was
before you reach the Umpqua,
about 100 feet west of the Elkton
tunnel, In fact. We were coming
home one evening and KJ slowed
the car to a creep while we sat
and stared at a RACCOON scram
bling across the road! No fool
ing! And did that send EJ's thoughts
back to his boyhood In Texas! I
wonder 1 boys in Oregon did the
same thing In those days: "We
boys used to wear a light on our
head, something like a miner's
lamp, and go out with the dogs
to hunt 'coons In the woods. Don't
remember that we ever caught a
'coon, but we sure found plenty
of 'possum!
'Some folks think they're fine
eating but we boyj never took
them home. We would watch
them 'play dead' a while, even
while the dogs wooled them,
then we'd call off the dogs and
hold them, and watch. Sine
enough, after a little, Mr, 'Pos
sum would open his eyes, decide
wi way was sale, aim away ne
In the Day's News
(Continued from Page One)
Also they are advancing some
pretty good arguments.
FOR example:
A Captain J. II. Sides (one of
the navy's top weapons experts)
tells the House Armed Services
committee in Washington that
when the war ended the Ger
mans were working on guided
missiles designed to "search out
and destroy bombers traveling
485 miles an hour 65,000 feet
(more than ten miles) up in the
would go. They like hollow logs
for one thing."
When we drive along "38" we
look at the turn-offs and wonder
what Is up each road, and say
w-e'll go see, one of these days.
Recenlly a letter same from a
reader-friend who lives on one of
those roads. Mrs. J. B. R. men
tioned, In her Interesting letter,
some Items of historical Interest
about the road which comes In at
Elkton. To my surprise it is one j a'r "
of the few things the Oregon He added:
Guide has failed me In: the roadj "Even before Rome of the big
isn't listed! But I found It on the , bombers we now have on order
Slate Highway map, and we cer-: can be delivered, our own coun
talnly are going to "explore" that j try wl" nave Sulded missiles
way, Mr,. R. Thanks! ABLE TO FIXD AND CK
I was reading the mail as I ' DOWN bombers flying above 40,
wailed for the pump-gadget on 000 foot-'
the washer to empty the water. 1
Suddenly the reading of Mis. R.'s
letter w as Interrupted. A flood of '
w
HAT Is he talking about?
lt' all a top-drawer secret,
nt .nut-en Htt ...Ml .nmA.KnP
warm soapsuds was swishing ,.. . .' . .,,.
around my fret, over the kitchen . ., ..... , .
linoleum! The hook over the sink-
a little Jigger that when placed
In the fuse of a shell would EX-
rim had ilipped-ah me, it was pLODE THE SHELL WHEN IT
qui a w nue ociute i unisnuo.
Mrs. R.'a letter. And JUST as I
typed that off went the power!
Doing this now by a candle. Well,
really. Mis. P, . . .!
boost In morale.
During the war, the bigger boys
who had Reived us so well here
mostly .found thev could maUe
more In oilier work and that left
vacation after effects except that Aforementioned tired feel
Ho hum!
LETTERS
to the Editor
Traffic Law To Protect
Children Needs Publicity
ROSEBl'RC.-You use a lot of
time, energy and Ink fighting bu
reaucrats In their attempts to
ward monopolizing riveiN and
streams, free enterprise etc., ihe
very birthright of our children.
Very laudable!
Now I think It would be u Ue t li.il Ih
and smashed Into our car. I lost
all lntnt-..wt limn Kii, I u
lying here ever since regaining I m anyonvllle
consciousness. inniKing ol law en
forcement nlfiivrs so anxious to
arrest and punish but so little in
terested In prevention.
The newspapers are filled with
big black letters about death and
accidents and such small print
to acquaint us of new s,itely
measures and laws to protect us.
This Is my twelfth riav in bed
and during that time I have sk.
eel everyone I've talked with, aml-si'ae talk
tuny fifty percent did not know I to war
oncoming traffic had to notice
G. C. HENRY
Canyonville, Ore.
Dire Results Envisaged
If A-Bomb War Develops
GLIDE If Russia has the
atom bomb, what about it?
There Is hut. one thing to do. j
Make peace with Rus-sia imme
diately. Stop the cold war and
lies, socialists, protestants,
babes, old H'ople, young people,
rich and poor. All will be includ
ed. No one will escaue the atom
bomb, because Ihe bombs will he execution
PASSED THE TARGET.
(Suppose when you cut loose
at a duck and missed by a foot or
so your charge of shot was equip
ped with one of these dinguses.
As the load from your scatter
gun passed It would explode and
pop the duck anyway. Equipped
like that, you could do a lot of
out on the swamp,
droptied solely to annihilate pop- : couldn't you?)
illation and destroy everything, i
simply becait.se war, if it comes,
will be a lotal war to the death,
with the deadliest of all weaiwns
-the atom bomb. Will the world
he worth living in amid such de
struction? It we start atomic war we sign
our death warrants. All will be
either killed outrisrht or else left
maimed and miserable living
wrecks. War No. 3 vill be unlike
any other war In its phase of total
annihilation and wanton destruc
tion. Participants will enter the von'
,.,t!l,. .. i.V, I ...... .I...I.V. )... ww.
it is a struggle to the death and
will ileal death accordingly. What
killings the bombs do not do the
people themselves will do among
themselves.
In the end nothing will bo set-
tlml Thm-n uill clill Kn i,li,tl. I
LET'S go on from there.
Suppose the duck you shot at
was a teal, and It was dodging
and twisting and looping In the
manner of teal when in a hurry.
If your load of shot was equipped
with a thinga-ma jig that would
cause it to FOLLOW the teal and
explode w hen it got close enough,
you wouldn't let many teal get
w
I'LL, all that is Inherent In
the term "guided missile." It
Implies a shell, fired maybe from
a gun, or a rocket launched from
a rocket installation, that will
gies of democracy, religion and KOLLOW a bomber till it gets
communism. War cannot destroy !-,, ,, nH ,, ,r
If we can make a shell that will
ideologies or religious beliefs. Hut
i' can set the world back 2,000
years.
JAMES E. R.U'GH.
Glide, Ore.
Craft Program
PlanOfYMCA
explode w hen it PASSES the tar
get, it seems possible that we
might make one that will FOL
LOW the target.
That's what the navy is driving
at.
to let Washington anil the li iemi stun for a .-h,i.,l ,i,.h ,
ly Southern Pacific rest for Ihe ing passengers. One out of ten did
time being and try to teach our, not know thev had to stop when
children how to stav alive to en- coming up behind
Jov that birthright. , Children should be Instructed
The children were told that a that although thev have the right
law had been passed compelling ol wav thev should be cautious
all traffic to stop until they were Caution signs should go up along
off the bus and safely across the the highuav where school bus.-,
hlghwav. The Ioke was on the tiavel. P.ioet. .h,,l,l ,ii ,.,i.
children, and me. 1 got the point ; rles on thu law and ihe ..-h.x.i. Seattle and Portland a. well a
alright but It wasn't funny. could tviss nn one of iheir .:... ! the Bonneville dam. mav he !,- i t 8 p.m
The truck driver was Ignorant Sient tellinc students of the ores. ! sti oved in a dav? Our forests Rev. Mr
or that law. No excuse, for the ervation of ancient Eg ptian I can lie destroyed' entirely bv in
children would be just as dead. , mummies ami leach them a little ' ecndiarv bombs In a short time.
A Roseburg YMCA craft pro
gram for adults is planned for
this winter. Reverend Walter A.
Mai-Arthur w ill head the program
but volunteer leaders will be
needed to Instruct the various
I'nthinkable!
the paiK-rs some
residents of our cities, like Port
land. adviH-ates going to war to
settle the matter. Do not jeople
Of Ihe l.u-wci- i-ill.w kn,.v.' th it it
war starts the cities will be the crafts planned for the weekly scs- tended
CAPTAIN SIDES told Congress
that the Germans who vcere
win king on these guided missiles
FELL INTO THE HANDS OF
THE RUSSIANS when the war
It is probable, he added.
targets for the first bombs? And s,"ns-
if war starts no one will be ex-: Persons Interested in leading
empt. It will be a w ar of exter- ! 'be various craft classes are In-
mutation from beginning to end.
Ii thev not know that cities like
vited to attend a meeting to he
held in the basement of the Meth
odist church Tuesday, Oct. IS.
that the Russians now know all
about such things and have them
ready to use on us.
s
I'PPOSE we gamble our roll
on the world-ranging bomber
AND LOSE! In that event, the
Two bovs made it across the
highway with a fraction of a sec
ond to spare hut the little girl
w as too late. We were parked be
hind the school bus, the children
ran out from between our car
and the back of the bus with nev
er a glance to right or left. How
the truck missed that girl Is
miracle. He w heeled the speed Ing
monster sharply to the lelt,
Just missing the rear of the bus,
Mai-Arthur will order
craft materials in the near fu
ture, which will he sold memhcis Russians would win the war and
of the classes at the lowest pos- ; those of us who staved alive
sihle cost. : would lose our liberty.'
According to Roseburg MCA . m ,
secretary Marlen Yoder. a d- ' nav-v n,n' wrong, but at
craft program has least what it has to say is
interested itei-sop interesting.
miliums of human w recks. In : and he hoped enough Instructors ;
ItMi t l!a t... 1-1.1 .. til k. . m.tn. I u.mia ha av utl .h'.. t.. I...4 (Kt
C AMONV1I.LE-I think your Utrous pile of wreckage. classes. j In radio, when broadcasts of
page In Saturday's News Review Iits of communists w ill he kill- ! It is planned to teach a differ- the same tvne are presented one
honoring the carrier boys was ex- ed. certainly. So will many Am- ent craft each month, with meet- after the other it is called "rat
cellent in giving the boy a big erlcans, Including Jews. Catho-1 ings to be held once weekly. 1 tern programming."
of self pi eservation.
DARREL1. W. WADE.
Rosoriuig, Ore.
Paper Delivery Service
Improvement Noted
Will war settle any dispute over '
. any question tvtwoen America:
and Russia? All a war will do is '
destroy Ihe cities, rum anil rav-.
I ace the entire world, kill or maim ! mand for
, most of the population and leave ; come from
New Store At
Winston Opens
The Winston Clothing and
Variety atore has opened for
business.
The store is located next to
Roy's tavern and carries complete
lines of clothing and variety
items.
The business is owned bv Mar
gery Nyberg and Nancy Linna of
Brockway. Both girls have a back
ground of business experience.
Miss Nyberg spent several years
in government service in Wash
ington, D. C, and Miss Linna for
merly worked for the Douelas
County bank.
Ihe girls plan to brine in a
complete line of children's toys
In the very near future.
Howard's Hardware store now
has a variety line open for busi
ness also, it was Installed recently
In conlunction with the hardware
business.
Rich Uranium Ore Found In Northwest Territory
KELOWNA, B. C. Oct. 13
(CP) Officials of the Yellow
knife Volcanic Gold Mine com
a., rfaimprf here Wednesday
that samples from their deposit
in the Marion lake district, 100
miles North of Yellow-knife. N--W.T.,
show rich uranium-bearing
ore.
Thev claimed the samples sent
to Ottawa show a uranium con
tent higher than that of the El
dorado mine at Great Bear lake,
richest producing uranium mine
in Canada.
The ore sent to Ottawa for as
say contained 1.52 per eent of
uranium oxide, officials said.
They added that tne tiaoraoo
mine has ore containing one per
cent uranium oxide.
J. Walley, secretary-treasurer
of the company with head-quarters
in Kelowna, said the ore
samples were "not selected" and
were taken only four feet below
the surface.
The deposit, which Is near
Great Slave lake in the North
west territories, is reported only
18 miles from a power project
and 23 miles from water transportation.
'II
i
Some tvpes of radio transmit
ting tuhei are gold-plated to in
crease tlKir efficiency at high
frequency operation.
One of the earliest magazine
articles describing "how to
build" a television receiver bears
the date of July, 1928.
PHONE 100
between 6.15 and 7
p. m., if you have not
received your Newi-
Review.
Ask Jor Horold Mobley.
NO MUSS
mfiSSf
CHATEAU CHEESE. . .2 lbs. 83c
P0TAT0CHIPS, 39c size . . 33c
GOLDEN WEST
COFFEE lb. 57c
KELLOGG'S
ALL BRAN, large pkg. . . . 23c
CAKE MIX, pkg 39c
FLAV-RPAK w
FROZEN PEAS, pkg 25c
PORTER'S
FRILLETS, large pkg 29c
JOLLYTIME
POP CORN, tin . 19c
Chocolate Drops s249t
FARM FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
Table Queen Squash, ea. . . . 5c I YAMS, 3 lbs 29c
Potatoes u s No 1 100 lbs. 3.79 TOKAY GRAPES, 2 lbs. ... 23c
Local Casabas, lb 3c Delicious Apples, local, box 2.19
MAY0NNAIS!
Best Foods
QUART
65c
BEG-MORE
DOG and
PH
J CAT FOOD
2 cans 27C
EGGS
Grade A Small
DOZEN
1 1 -6
1 1 r.L--me
42 c ip
High in ProtsiifJ
BRAND
18c
Price affectiv Friday and Saturday
BOB FRANKS Grocery
Cast A Stsphsnt
FRII DELIVERY
Phon HI
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it
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245 N. Jackson
Phone 872