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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1950)
4 Th Newt-Review, Roseburg, Or. Sat., May 13, 1950 Published Daily fxcept Sunday by tho ' " News-Review Company, Inc.', latereS eerea4 eleea Hi(lf Mae el ae e.i elflea l Veaeevrs. Or.,.e. eater Ml ! Much S, ISIS CHARLIS V. STANTON EDWIN L. KNA Editor a4 Manager Member of the Associated Pratt, Orafon -Newspaper Publisher! Attotlation, tha Audit Buraau of Circulation earceeatei kr WrUT-HDIIIDAt CO., INC., affleee la New Ter, CSIeefa, Sea rrancleee, Lee Ancelee, Seattle, reman, at. Leale aiBX IirTION IATTI.li Omu-r Mill Vn Tear SS.ee, elm M M. tar raenlhe IS.ae. Br (')- Carrier fer fear lla.ea la eevaarel, leee taaa na rear, a" meala SI.ea. Oaltlia Ortfaa Jr Mali Tar year els aaeatae Se-le, Urea aaeathe Sl.U. GAME HEADQUARTERS By CHARLES V. STANTON Roseburg; is to be made district headquarters for the Oregon Game department. Charles A. Lockwood, state game director, reports arrangements to obtain office space where district activities may be centered. Under the reorganization plan authorized by the last session of the state legislature, administrative work of the game department is being decentralized. Heretofore the game commission was charged with all supervision and administration. Every two-bit activity had to go before the commission for its approval. No employee had authority to do anything, even in emergencies, without permission. The new law makes the commission responsible for policies and budgets. Actual administration is in the hands of the game director. The commission determines the broad pro gram to be followed, then instructs the director to do the work. In an effort to overcome complaints that the department was too far from the people, and to expedite administrative work, reorganization by districts now is in progress. The state is being divided into five sections. A supervisor will be placed over each section or district He will be directly responsible for all game department activities, property and employes in his district. He will have assistance from fish and game biologists in studying local problems. He will have authority to conduct much of the district work without reference to state headquarters. Greater Efficiency Anticipated The new'proirram, it is expected, will produce greater efficiency in two ways. First, it will permit a larger measure of authority in the district, encouraging immediate attack on local problems without having to wait for permission. Second, closer relationship between the department and sportsmen will be obtained. Sportsmen, who finance the work of the game department through license fees, often are inclined to go off the deep end without knowing all the factors involved In a particular issue. For instance, at the last meeting of the Roseburg Rod and Gun club the matter of keeping the whitetail deer refuge on the North Umpqua river open to hunting was considered. This reserve was closed for many years to pro tect one of the state's few remaining herds of whitetail deer. But deer population became too large for the range. When the reserve was opened to hunting Inst year it was found that some of the deer weighed less than 100 pounds, when they should have weighed nearly twice as much. Does are raiding gardens and field crops, causing much com plaint from farmers. Some of the local club members urged an open season on doe deer to better balance the population. Others wanted does protected. Neither side had factual data as basis for an argument. The discussion was predicated on personal observation and opinion. With the district headquarters in operation, however, it will be possible to obtain comparatively accurate census of population, appraisal of range capacity and other perti nent facts, and then set up a scientific management program. The game department has been conducting a limited scien . tific management program for several years. As a result, deer population has increased steadily, animals have be come progressively larger and healthier because they had ample food, and the balance has been well preserved. Naturally, without study of each and every section of the state, exceptions to these conditions will be found in certain areas, but for the state as a whole the big game population is in excellent condition, due to improved management When better fact-finding machinery is provided, manage ment can gain greater efficiency. Oregon Has Two Commissions We find many people uninformed concerning Oregon's fish and game organization and, perhaps, a brief explana tion is in order. Insofar as the state's fishery is affected, we have two commissions. The State Fish commission has supervision and control over the commercial fishery. The State Game commission is charged with management of the sports fishery and all game birds, game animals and fur bearers. The game commission has no authority over the taking of fish with commercial gear, nets, seines, traps or trawl. Each commission maintains separate hatchery and propa gation facilities. Until recently there was virtually no coop eration between the two agencies. In fact, there was direct and often vicious competition. In late years, however, the two commissions have been cooperating quite effectively and the fish commission has inaugurated many conservation practices which should improve both commercial and sports fisheries in future years. The game commission is supported entirely from angling and hunting license fees, together with minor income from a few sources such as sale of beaver pelts, etc. It receives some federal money definitely earmarked for purchase and operation of public shooting grounds. The fish commission draws income from a poundage fee collected on fish caught commercially, but, because this revenue has steadily decreased and is far too small to support the department's activities, it has been necessary for the commission in recent years to draw from the public treasury. I !rS . I AM I W I . I V I 1 v. a - w . y I I I fa. W X 1 ' Meet The CANDIDATE W. C. Watson IP V iThe Information for tha fnllowlns atory wh aubmmed by tha candidate in tha primary election. May in. and dnea not nereeiarlly itsnlfv endorse ment by tha Newe-Review.) Ward C. Watson. Sutherlin, la a candidate for reflection ai jut lire of the peace of tha t'alapooia dis trict, a position he has held six and one-half years. Watson was born at Woodstock, N.B., Canada, in August, 18H7, and has been a resident of Douglas county seven years. lie went to school in Maine and came west in 1906, settling in Kitsap county. Washington. He was employed by the Otis Klevator company from 1906 to 191 ( and from 1916 to 1943, when he retired at Chicago. Watson was city recorder of Sutherlin from 1944 to 1945. The candidate pledges "contin ued unbiased and faithful attention to the duties of my office." AFL To Demand Wage Increases PHILADELPHIA. May 13- The AK1, through its executive council today served notice on the nation's employers it will "strive" for higher wages in 1950. President William Oreen told a press conference yesterday the council urged "unions to strive for higher wages" as a means of in creating consumer income. "Higher wages will increase pur chasing power and will broaden the market for all types of goods and services as well as stimulating increased efficiency in business." Green said. The labor leader explained that "purchasing power must expand progressively and maintain a bal ance with productivity, .otherwise surpluses will increase unemploy ment!" Green said industry has been modernizing plants and machinery and thus was able "to increase productivity." "This," he added, "reduces cost and makes possible higher wages. It is possible for industry to give up some of its higher earnings without increasing costs." Kirhard J. Gray, president of the AKL building and construction trades department, demanded that the Taft-Hartley law be repealed Gray charged the present congress with fading to redeem its prom ises and said that after the I94S election "it did not take us long to find out how mistaken we had been in hoping that election meant repeal." How's Business? When Mrs. Alice Brugmsn trans planted ( wistaria vine from a gal lon tin can, and wished, In 18M, that it would "cover the house," she certainly got all she wished for and a lot more besides. For not only did the vine cover the 10 room house but it devoured the house! Now the world goet to see 'the Wistaria" at Sierra Madre, Calif, When the original owner sold the home to Henry T, Fennel, he discovered it was "lost effort to hack away at the branches." The vine was over the roof by then, and Mr. Fennel declared he could "hear it growing" on hot aummer nights duo to the snapping of shingles loosened by the vine's creeping and not to be denied ten drils. Today, parts of the house are left only as supports for the vine that smothered it, for soon the house was abandoned 1 A sec ond house was built about 200 feet away, and today the world's larg est, most famous wistaria, is at tacking that house, too! Succeed ing owner continued, until now the chamber of commerve and other civic bodies have taken over! The wistaria (Chinese Wistaria Sinen How To Stop Gambling Evil By Breaking The Bookie Is Advice Given To Housewives By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK There is a way to break up the nation-wide gambling ring. The American housewife can do it. She can succeed where the cops and politicians seem to have failed. And she can make a mint of pin money for herself in doing it, too. How? Well, my theory is simple. It is based on taking the gambling .out of gambling. You can't beat the horses, girls, but there is a possible way to beat the bookies. And if you can beat the hookies you can break up organized ille gal gambling. A suburban housewife here has shown th- way to do it. Under the law you can sue to recover money paid to settle gambling debts. And that's just what Mrs. Hannan S. Kartiganer did. She sued Jules II. Bender for $11,195 she claimed her husband lost to him in horse race bets three years ago. And a gentlemanly jury of eleven men and one woman returned a verdict in her favor. Although Bender insisted he him self was no bookmaker but a busi nessman, the decision disclosed a fascinating way in which deter mined ladies might put the knuckle on men who. beyond cavil, are professional bookies. Here, for example, is one pos sibility: A srouo of 100 housewives, out raged because their husbands keep brnging home paychecks full of gambling holes, holds a rummage sale and an ice cream aocial. They raise $1,000. Three of the girls take the $1, 000 to the bisizerst bookie in town and lay it on the nose for Plug j Memorial SerVICt Set I'gly. a 100-to-l shot, to win in . ... the fifth, if lightning should strike : For Drowning Victim Plug I'gly and he comes in ahead. M.morj,i services will be held each of the 100 gals collects SLOW Monday at T p.m. in Oivmpia. -enough for a fur coat. And the Wash. for v,,lter H. Klurv. who bookie has a broken heart. j ,, believed to have drowned in The next day the girls put $5.-, lushman lake, reservoir for the 000 on Sadfoot, another 100-to-l Taroma Power and light plant, hoofer, to breeie through in the Klury's bodv has not been found, fourth. If ,ie loses, the girls promp-1 For this reason the family re ly file suit aginst the bonkie. And I quests that no flowers be sent if all 100 of the women show up I He w as a brother of Henrv and in court with their 27S children. Victor Flury and Haiel Scott of in rags, won't the jury make the Roseburg. but ACCOPPIN" TO TtiS PAPZS, We'RZ PUE FOftA SLUMP By ViaJuutt S. Martini sis) now covers an acre of ground with its arbor-supported mass of bloom, lasting through April. Un doubtedly there are readers who, when on the California end of "99" which I like to call the Shuttle, have seen this marvelous sight. One owner, Mrs. C. L. Lawless, spent $100,000 on the Vine! Indeed its upkeep includes $10,000 for an all-year gardner, and experts in the three summer months to help him with pruning and so on. I don't like statistics as a rule, un less fixed up in some palatable way, but dear me, the wistaria has a circumference it its base of 43 inches, and one of its long branches was traced out for 525 feet. This vine exemplifies what a "clinging vine" can do when it sets its mind to the Job; an 80 foot oak tree is about to give up the struggle and become, like the old house, a support for the far reaching vine. Ten tons of fertiliz er is given the vine yearly, not to mention "hormones," and some far-signted individual promoted the idea of starting another wis teria, a' pink and white one, to mingle with the aging lavender one. bookie hand back the $5,000? So the next day the girls, maybe working through a couple of male stoogies this lime, bet the $5,000 on still another 100-to-l shot. If he leads the field to the wire, they collect a half million bucks or the bookie commits suicide. If their horse loses, they haul the bonkie right back into court. This "break the bookies" pro gram could sweep the ladies clubs of the nation like wildfire. It has two things women love: (1) a moral purpose, and (2) a chance to make some money. . It beats radio giveaway shows all hollow. If American wives cooperated in this you-can't-lose-from-winning-venture, most bookies in six months would be back pitching pennies agsinst each other far a living. The only flaw I can sc in the whole scheme is that women, after all, are human beings, too in their way. When they start plsy ing the horses they act just like men. They brag about their win nings and hide their losses. And 'before long they'd be secretly bet- ting against each other, and it would be ihe bookies' wives who'd be buying the fur coats. Rut it is a wounderful plan, isn't it? Research Deals With Second Growth Timber. Ultimately To Be Industry's Sole Supply By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. SALEM, May 12 IJPi It won't be too long before all of Oregon's old growth timber is gone. And then the lumber industry will nave to depend on second growth, timber. Right now, there isn't too much information about second growth timber. But the state forestry department'! research division is going to find out. The second growth study is to find out how it should be handled, how fast it should be cut, and how to improve the timber stands. It is setting up an experimental forest to help. Eastern Oregon pine presents a problem because a lot of it grows in clumps The department ia try ing to find a cheap way of thinning these trees, probably by poison. A cut is made in the side of the tree and the poison is inserted. New tables are being developed to enable logging operators to measure the size of a tree and compute the amount of lumber in it. The department is learning most of its information on how to pro tect forests in the 300,000-acre Til lamook burn, three times ravaged by fire. The foresters are learning how to fireproof whole forests by using firebreaks. Firebreak's Created The Tillamook burn bow is being cut into quarters, like a pie. Di viding each quarter wiu be a fire break up to a half mile wide. Each firebreak is located on a ridge, is cleared of all trees and snags, and has a road through it. Then, if a fire breaks out in any part of the burn, the firebreaks can be used to get men to the fire and to build backfires against the blaze. After these firebreaks are built, more will be added until the whole burned-over area is cut into small pieces. The whole area is being replanted, with little chance that there will be a fourth disastrous fire. The department now is complet ing a study of all fire districts in the state to see what they need in the way of men and equipment. These districts either are operated by the state or by the timber op erators. Slash Fires Are Problem It is studying the control of alder and brush which threatens to cov er roads through forests. Slash burning is one of the worst problems, and is receiving lots of attention. Last fall, when the department got weather forecasts that the hu midity would be high, it approved slash burning. But the humidity dropped, and the slash fires spread into forested areas. And the de partment was deluged with criti cism by the public. The department now is studying why those slash fires got away and to find out some way of determin ing when it is safe to burn the slash. The research program Is a co opeative effort among the indus try, OSC achool of forestry, fed eral forest service, and the state forester. It has an advisory com mittee representing these various groups, and the main goal "is to give the industry its money's worth because the industry finances it.' This research is a long-time job. For instance, the gorse control project will take 25 years, and most of the others will lsst two to five years. Flood Situation Slightly Eased In Some Localities iBv The Associated Preen Flnodwaters appeared receding today over parts of Nebraska and Oklahoma, where damage was es timated in the millions. The death toll in the two states was 2622 in Nebraska. The Red river at Winnipeg was at its highest level 29 feet, eight inches in more than 100 years. The swollen stream appeared to have halted its climb up the sand bagged dikes guarding the flood stricken Manitoba metropolis. The threat remained critical for sev erl residential areas. Some 40.000 residents of the flooded areas of southern Mani toba, the Winnipeg Tribune esti mated, had taken refuge in the twin cities Flnodwaters spilled out over one-eighth or more of the 70-square-mile Metropolitan area, and 540 square miles of southern Manitoba.. Flooding creeks and rivers in eastern and south central Okla homa apoeared to have reached their crests and receded slightly. Property rlama-e was estimated at more than $1,000,000. In addition to the two dead, two persons were missing. Farmers in the rich Se quoyah county bottom lands were evacuating their homes. A man and a woman were swept to their deaths from an automo bile on a flooded bridge near Shw nee. Okla. Some 500 residents of Waurika fled their flooded homes when waters of two creeks isolated the community. ipf ' ..TSaJaaamj DON FORBES Representative Douglos County State Bank Bldg Phone 1737 Vets Can Still Reinstate Their Life Insurance ' World War II veterans csn still get back their National Service Life Insurance, no matter bow long it has been since thev stopped paying premiums, according to the veterans Administration. And the procedure is quite simple. If a veteran's G. I. insurance has been lapsed for three months or more, he'll have to pass a phy sical examination. The VA savs it will provide this examination for the veteran without charge. If a veteran's G.I. policy has been lapsed for a period of less than three months, a physical ex amination in most cases won't be required at all. ! In the payment of back pre-1 miums, the V A explained that the amount required differs, depend ing upon the type of policy held by the veteran. For term insurance, the veteran only- haa to pay two monthly pre miums when he applies for rein statement, one for the last month covered by the "grace period" and the other to cover the first month of coverage by the rein stated policy. In the case of a converted pol icy, the veteran is required to make up all the back premiums, with interest. Veterans wanting to reinstate lapsed G. I. insurance policies are advised .to see their nearest VA office for information and assist ance. 4 PASTORS IN 104 YEARS LOUISVILLE, Ky. ."Pi- Green Street Baptist church and its Negro congregation is 106 years old. And it has had only four pastors in that time. Founded in 1844 by a group of 29 slaves, the church now has an ac tive membership of 500. In contrast to its stately pillared temple of to day, Grew Street church had its humble beginning in a livery stable which the members by the work of their own hands converted inte a suitable house of worship. The founders could neither read nor write, so an interested white friend served as secretary. The records in his clear script are still legible. First of the church's four pastors was the Rev. George Wells, who served through six of the congrega tion's formative years, dying in 1850. The second minister, the Rev. Richard Sneathen, served 20 years. seeing his people emerge from slavery. The Rev. Daniel Abraham Gaddie guided the flock for 39 years. And a similar period was spanned by the service of the Rev. Henry Wise Jones, .who has just retired. MORE TOLL ROADS CHICAGO (.T Pay-as-you-drive highway systems are growing. The American Public Works association reports that nearly 300 miles of toll roads now are in use in Con. necticut, Maine. New York and Pennsylvania. An additional 132 miles of toll roads are under con struction in New Jersey and New Hampshire. H Salaries 1 ?3ft GRANT'S BUSINESS COLLEGE 112 N. Sttphms FOR . . . SERVICE ... EXPERIENCE ... CO-OPERATION . . . Investig j the services offered by your "Home owned, Home-operated" bank Money left on deposit with us remains in DOUGLAS COUN TY All facilities available for your individual needs. Douglas County State Bank Member. Federol Otoosit Insurance Corp, Does Your Piggy-Bank Rattle? Did you save os much as you anticipated during the past year? How much hove you saved in the past ten years' If your savings plan is bogging down you need ' u syMemanc memoa some thing along the lines of a Sun Life Endowment policy. Start Savings this sure way today. Sun L'fe Assurance Company of Canada Res 993-R Regulation Cited On Jobless Compensation SALEM. May 12 (. -Only one claimant for jobless benefits out of every 40 has any seasonal restrictions on his benefits, the state unemployment compensation commission said today. r.l.,,.. f . B.ki,t. . declared to be seasonal can't get benefits during the off-seasons. The commission said that changes in seasonality benefits made by the 1949 legislature won't affect many workers until after next July 1. Industrial Arts Exhibit Scheduled Next Week The annual Roseburg Senior high school industrial arts exhibit, spon sored by the Rotary club, is sched uled for May 17 to 20. announced Roland Edie, industrial arts in structor. Projects completed during the year will be on exhibit at the sen ior high school shop Thursday all day and evening. The exhibits are to be moved down town and will be placed in store windows, where they m-y be viewed Fridsy and Saturday. May 19 and 20. The exhibit will feature the work of the industrial arts classes, in cluding mechanical drawing, wood working and wood turning. The exhibit will be judged by se lected Rotary club members. Har old Hoyt is chairman of the Rotary committee assisting with arrange ments of the exhibit. TOOTHBRUSH WITH MEALS WELLINGTON. New Zealand tri timers at a wemnstuii restau rant saw a pretty girl put a tooth brush beside her plate. The girl ate her meal. Then she vigorously brushed her teeth and emptied the water into her teacup. Her girl friend looked em barrassed, sp-iled, but didn't y anything. The girls were o of 170 dental trainees who are carrying through an experiment. Half will brush their teelh after all food and every drink, except water, for a whole year. The otner 85 will brush their teeth only twice a week Thursdays and Saturdays. At the end of the year research men hope to be able to say which is better intensive oral hygiene or casual hygiene. J WE HAVE JOBS AVAILABLE Through Our Employment Service For Trained Workers -OU hovt th training, w hove the ib. you don't hovt th training, com or call tomo row for assistance entering this fild. Phono 153J.R . i