4 The Newi-IUvlew, Roseburj, Ore. Thur., Dee. 21, 1 950 Publlihtd Dily Except Sunday by th Ntwi-Revitw Company, Inc. EattrH KB ran elan mill Ma 1. ig-fn at tb puit ttUt 41 KoMbart, Oroa, intlar let of Marttb 1, 1111 CHARLES V. STANTON EDWIN L. KNAPP Editor Manager Mtmbtr of the Astociattd Prtu, Oregon Nowtpspor Publithort Aiiociarion, th Audit Burau of Circulation! tUprtnU4 by ft rRTHOIXIDAt CO.. IM; . fftr. i hw York. C !, Franclaca). Lot Anil, 111. PtirtJanaj. SI. l,e)f.la lUHttl.HlfJ ION lArm-lR Orainn B Mail fat MM m moAlh M Ml, Ibro mai-tha It. Hit R cilf 1-arrlrr -f'r tltt.iMi In arfvanrfl, tuat na rur per mnnlb ll.nn ntjtj-U Oraiam By Mill far fair K.ot. Btanlba $4.11. Ihra anvnlba 1111. PLANNING OUR INDUSTRY' By CHARLES V. STANTON A BUKffestnd pattern for orderly development of our timber industry has been prepared and noon will be avail able for distribution in printed form. From its recommen dations we should be able to increase our industrial pro duction without materially raising the rate of timber re moval. The pattern 0is laid out in the economic and industrial Kurvey of the I'mpqtia drainage system conducted by a jfroup of federalf state and county agencies, cooperating with chambers of commerce at rtoseburtr, Myrtle Creek and Riddle. It is an interesting report, the first of its kind to be. compiled in the United States. Plans for the survey were made last spring. Represen tatives of various federal and state agencies saw a need for more orderly and complete utilization of our natural resources particularly thn timber resource. Kach agency had some material bearing on the subject of industrial usage of resources, but no method existed for bringing all this information'.togelher. The Bureau of Land Management look the lead in or ganizing a pool of experts representing more than a score of agencies. Kach agency agreed to make all its infor mation available to the central panel. Learning of the plan, e asked to be the first com munity surveyed. The request was honored because of the newness of the timber industry in the county, coupled with the rapid rate of expansion. This offered an opportunity to create an orderly pattern while the industry still was new and before the resource became depleted. Local Cooperation Given The cooperating chambers of commerce employed Trof. C. A. Broders of Oregon State college to gather field notes within the county. His information then was placed before a panel of economic and industrial experts from the V. S. Forest service, Oregon Forest Products laboratory, Bureau of Land Afanngement and other cooperating state and fed eral departments. The panel of experts outlined the pattern of the report, the material to be included, research studies, etc. Prof. Rroders, with assistance from various sources, then set about compiling the information. He has condensed the report into 100 pages of type written material, but n large volume of supplemental in formation has been furnished to augment the report itself, while service of each of the contributing agencies have been offered to assist the chambers of commerce in put ting recommendations into execution. Many Opportunities Suggested The survey shows we already have capacity in saw mills and plywood plants to overcut. our timber resource at a rale one-lhird higher than the allowable sustained yield figure. Too, we are in critical need of access roads. These roads are essential if our timber cut is to be man aged properly. Many opportunities exist for secondary manufacture, primarily a Kraft-type pulp mill, board planU, bark utilization, etc. Cut slock from Douglas fir and native hardwoods would find ready market.; The re port suggests many ways we can increase industry and employment without adding to the number of trees cut. Money expended for the survey will be wasted if we simply file Ihe report for reference material. It 'must be put into operation. Other communities are to be given sim ilar surveys. We have the opportunity to get into suggested markets ahead of competition if we act fast. Cooperative Effort Needed The survey comes at an opportune time. We are enter ing upon a period of wartime economy. Observers believe this condition of impending or ultimate actual war will con tinue at least five years. During the period there will be a ronstant demand for wood products. In such times cap ital usually is available for essential industrial installations. The defense effort will demand many forms of crating material planks, plywood, veneer, waterproof paper and cardboard all of which can be produced locally. C u t stock will be required for thousands of defense uses. Lum ber will be needed for camps, housing, etc. We can supply an abundance of these materials. We will need to know the specific requirements of the defense effort, to learn what we can supply, and then fi nance the installations to provide the products. We would like to suggest to our industrial leaders that they meet and set up a cooperative organization: that they finance employment of a market engineer: that, this market engineer be Instructed to learn from defense agencies, com panies making defense materials, etc., the products we can supply, and that the organization then, cooperatively, either set up the necessary production plants, or endeavor to at tract outside capital. We believe such plans would result in tremendous de velopment of our industry along the line proposed in the report. We also believe we will never have a better oppor tunity than now. Eisenhower Optimistic In Present Threat Of War By LOUDON KELLY UKW'ER i.T A rielorminctl. cheerful "Ike" F.iscnhower says "The aitiwtion those days is not nearly as dark as It was in the spring of 1!U2." The general, named to head a F.uropean peacetime army harked hy the dozen Atlantic pact coun tries, told a news conference: "Sooner or la'r. this country is going to ho uniirti and in Ihe lervor of its united strength, other na tions are going to cling to us. I am extremely hoprtul Inat America has reachctl the lowest point of dis unity and is going back up "o ittn. Kisenhnwer said "W? rr.ay exprct to live for some time on this hih pble.iu of tension and un easiness." In reply to a reporter's question whether, "taking the long Mew, are you optimistic of the future," Ihe wartime a I leader came back with an emphatic "Yes." Kisenhnwer said "The rcspoi bilities uporv-aciy nation that under takes glohaMarfare" must not he mjjiimirod. "11 is risking then its own position nf power, ' ho said, "As witness Hitler and Mussolini." Wilhout mentioning Russia by same, ho said in answer In another question, "If they aro choosing clo nal war, they aro not showing the wistlom thoy havo shown in the past." High School Yule Ball Dated At Benson Gym The Ht'iiMm .i-honl gvmnasium Wi'l he the scenOnf llo-rturg hiyh school s Christmas ball. The for nial fiance, sponsored by Ihe tjirls liague, is an annual event, lianc ing will ho from 8 ,10 p m. to 11 3d p m. Friday, Hoc. 32 All students of Roseliurg hich school, invited gnosis anil alumni are welcome. .leannO Rapp, general chairman fijlhe aff.-nr, has announced lhat IhVroom will he decorated in keep ing with the theme, "Christmas fantasy." o o : . vfr-a. raft t7SISs A-Jfm.j. i , . . , In The Day's News By FRANK (Continued From Page One) proximating shooting war has heen going on for years. Malaya is one of communist China's next objectives in Asia. How are the British going to pull any troops away Horn there tor service in Europe? France? 1 think we'd better forget France. The French have their hands full in InrJo-China. The communist parly is VKRY strong in France. The statement is'heing flatly made and not satisfactorily .ontrndicled that the French will NEVKR fight j Russia. Belgium? Holland? Luxembourg? Denmark? Take a look ai thi map. That I nil.1! f hp slnrv nrftl v uoll Rnrr. II that in two war? thrse people (fine , people, hut not strong militarily) j haven't been able to do much us-' laincd fighting. ' That leaves Germany. Germany is a conquered nation, j Her people are saying they WON'T FIGHT except as FREF, people as full partners. The French say they won't stand for a free and independent German army. How are we going to get around that impasse? "What shall we do about Christ mas. . . this year?" I remember the one after Pearl Harbor, in 1141. We were still wailing for some word from or about our 17-year old lad who had been there that fateful December 7. Our other son was in Navy school in San Hiego, soon to ship out. 'I can't he home for Christmas," he had told us the previous Satur day at the naval ';ale. "We have to keep our guns hy our chairs, and our canteens tilled, ready for any thing. And. wo have to wear our heavy sweaters-" that sweater was his greatest Irial at the moment Ho added: "We can't go beyord sound of the siren when outside the gate. . . " j So wo wondered what to do about j Christmas. . . this year? I couldn't remember a Christmas wilhout a tree. Hill - now? With no harl for it, we looked at trees one evening, and then I saw our tree! It was aimy one, not over Iwo feel, priced above the biggest ones, but oh. it was covered with tiny cones, and there was something about it lhat eomlorted me, lhat met mv need. So we look il home and pi:l it on the desk out on Ihe ijbssed in porch. II needed n trimming really, with all Ihe rones, over a hundred nf them! Bui we used a few of Ihe dear, familiar things put nway the last year. We had a tree end felt somehow as if we had withstood a kind of defeat. And then, oh joy! In came Iwo lads with shunnf faces: "The navy gave us leave while our new barracks are being built. They took ours for a new company. Home for two weeks: I brought Hon home because l,e lives too far away. "Then with s happy smile, he added, "I knew Iheie would be a lice'" Next year, although a gold Star was now hanging in Ihe win dow, we went looking for a tree, PP Vinh"f" S- Mart TV J Competition - . JENKINS Suppose we should force the Ger mans to fight? How much good is a vassal nation that is FORCED to fight? . Another problem: THE RUSSIANS HAVE WARNED THAT THEY WILL N OT TOLERATE ORGANIZED REVIVAL OF GERMAN MILI TARISM. What do they mean by German "militarism?" They'll define that for themselves when the time comes. If they choose, Ihey can de fine a German army squad, com manded hy a German corporal, as a revival of German militarism. They're good at making their own definitions. Now for Ihe hig question: What will the Russians do if thev see us organizing an EFFECTIVE army in Western Europe? I'd guess they'll move and MOVE QUICK. They have plenty nf men and j plenty of guns and plenty of t?nks j and plenty of planes to move with. . They have six armies' poised and' ready in East Germany. j It's tough to have to say it. hu' ' in Western Europe there are all the '' makings of another Korea. ! General Ike has a job on his hands. , but never again did we se a little tree like Ihe one in 1941. A forestry j ; expert said it must have been the j lip of a large tree, and was, he j thought, most unusual. We saved ; Ihe cones and put wire hangers on them to use on later trees. I This year it is "Korea." Roys : this year are no different. They, too, like In think that home at Christmas will be just the same as; they remember. The Ctuistmas the ! heart keeps, symbolized for some j ! hy a Christmas tree on which hang I countless invisible memories along with Ihe faivjiliar ornaments, is a, Chrisjmas that cannot he "com-1 mercialized." For this, we thank I Thee, Lord! ! Let us remember Ihe Christ in Chrutmas; then our children wherever they may be. will be keeping Christmas wtth us. Margaret Negotiating For Television Contract NEW YORK in Margaret Truman is negotiating a long term exclusive contract with the Na tional Rroadcasting company lor lfc!h radio and television Appear ances. Charles Barry, vice presi dent j charge of tlie NBC radio program department, (Announced. A contract has not yet been com pleted, hut Ihe theatrical trade pa per. Variety, said Miss Truman would receive $4,000 for each ap pearance with an income ap proaching $200,000 annually hen tier program moves over alT.NBc alN AM-vidco circuits. Miss TiO.ian, other than her singing, recently appeared in Ihe field of comedy when she 'raded humorous remarks with Mistress of Ceremonies Tallnla Bankhead on the NBC Sunday flight radio program, "The Big S?row." i .... , Ji 14EE& rW-A seimM-. WORLDWIDE Mible Keating DAILY READING Thanksgjvinp to Christmas Dec. 20 Hebrews 12:1-13 j Tin vord ft lump unto mil fret, and a light vvtn my path. Yoncallct To Vote On Bonds For City Water System The Voncalla city council Tues day night voted to submit a $11. V O(M) bond issue, for modernization of the city water system, to the vot ers at a special election Dec. 27. Actiing on the recommendations made by consulting engineers at a Oec. 14 meeting, the council stip ulated that the bonds were to be of $500 or $1000. denomination, bear ing not more than five percent in terest; the first to be paid olf in not less than five years; and a per centage of the water revenue to be put into a sinking fund to amortize the debt. The proposal also calls for a new storage reservoir and extension, enlargement of the present lines and other improvements. Judges for the special election will be Mrs. Hwy Mediki. Mrs. Fred Kruse and Mrs. Dora Benner. Any registered voter may vote on the issue if a resident of the precinct for 30 days and of the state for six months. AlUrnitt Plant Out It nod Archie nice, representing the consulting engineer firm of Cornell Howland, Hayes and Merrifield of Corvallis, explained the proposed improvements in rielail at the pub lic meeting held Dec. 14. Rice outlined the advantages and disadvantages of three possible procedures which could be used to solve the water problem. The first involves Ihe use of Wil son creek while the other two plans would utilize Adams creek under different systems. Most practical, he said, appears to be Wilson creek, from whicn the city gets its present water supply. Such a project would cost $53,000, he estimated. The city has held wa ter rights on the stream since 1923. To improve this source. Rice ex plained that a "compounding" res ervoir, made of dirt wi'h a capac ity of 14 million gallons, would be necessary in addition to a chloritw tion lant and pump, which would be used during the summer low water period. About 8,000 feet of old pipe would have to be replaced. Second possible source of water sucgested was Adams creek, with the addition of a pumping sys tem. Douht was expressed that enough water could be obtained from this source during the sum mer period of low water, because of present water rights on t h e creek. Total cost of this project was estimated at til.ooo. The third alternative, a gravity water system based on Adams cieek. was scarcely considered be cause of the cost figuretat SSI, ooo. 0 Regardless of the system se Irvted, there must be a distribu tion system reservoir of sleel or uiod wuh a capacity of 2:0.000 gal lons. Rice said. This would cost $1,000 and would necessitate a fund of jas.OOO set aside to be used dmn0ihe next 20 years to replace old pipes inside the city limits. Ther- arf mor- than 6.000 differ pnt item", usually on display at the Metropolitan Museum ot-rt i n New York City. J m Washington H Report By FULTON ftwiS JR. (Copyright, 1 950 King eaturas Syndicate, Inc.) WASHINGTON Dean Achaton's dismissal from tha Stale department when and if it comes should be followed in lock step fashion by'aOt'ke fatajfor at least two of his underlings, Deputy Under Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Ambassador At Large Philip Jessup. Rusk is supposed to be an expert on the Far East, and as such ac companied President Truman t o Wake Island for the conference with General Douglas MacArthur. As a Far East export, Rusk as late as last fall opined that the Chinese Communists were not Communists at all, but simply indigenous pa triots, not at all unlike our own rev olutionary war heroes. The facts are that Rusk is not an expert on the Far East. He has never served there for the State department, has no background in Far Evtern affairs and, on the basis of his own biography in Ihg State department register, ha.vonly a total of four years' experience in diplomatic matters. Vrom 1940 to 1946 he served overseas with the army in Europe. Prior to that he was a college professor. In 1947, he was appointed director of the of fice of special political affairs in the Slate department, and later to the UN desk. In 1949, he was named assistant secretary of state and in May of last year was appointed to his present post. Angus Ward, a diplomat with a lifetime of service in the Orient is a real export on the Far East. But Acheson shuffled him off to Kenya Colony in Africa, where he is an assistant to a consul not out of his twenties. Jessup's major claim to fame is two personal appearances at the New York trials where he pro- claimed his faith in the convicted tiiiel of State department sec: its Alger Hiss. He is Acheson's chief adviser on high policy problems. He also is a pal of Owen Latti more, the Baltimore Bugle who blows off everv week or so about what we should1 do in Asia. Just last week, in fact, l.attimore struck a historic pose for the magazine U. S. News and World Report in which he averred: 'There seems to be a whole range of views about the Chinese Communists being completely pup pels ot prisoners of Russian policy, llon'l know of any hard evidence on it one way or the other." U. S. marines and infantrymen fighting in Korea are probably not quite as skeptical about Commu nism as Owen the sage, especially now that Russian jets are clutter- i ; ing up the skies. ' I Jessup has had little or no per-1 sonat experience in or with the Far East either, although he is palmed I off on us as an expert. He h a s j been in and out of the State de- j partment since 1924, mostly as a legal adviser. Later he look on sev-, eral chores for Acheson in connec tion' with the United Nations, but i nrne of them had anything to cio I with the Far East. That has nut kept him from giving us advice about what we should do there, however. i Acheson is, of course, the big is sue with most Americans who have been alert to the sell-out of Chini to the Communists, But the rest of his team must not he neglected if any good is to come from his oust-, ing. It's true that you can feed a baby Dewey's Defense Advice Rapped By Congressman WASHINGTON A fellow republican Wednesday sharply criticized the defense rec ommendations of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey and said Dewey would Ho well to leave such matters to pro fessional soldiers. Rep. Paul Shafer (R-Mirh) termed the New York Governor's recently' broadcast mobilization proposals as "manifestly absurd" and Ihe "opening gun in his 1952 nomination campaign" for presi dent. Shafer, a member of the house armed forces committee, asked in a statement for the congressional recortl how Dewey proposed to keep and train 100 divisions of 12, 600,000 troops on short notice. Dewey had called for mobilizing that many divisions immediately, as well as inaugurating universal military service. Shafer asked: "Has he forgotten, or does he not know, that today in American training camps thousands of drafted men lack uniforms, antl are waiting for the guns, tanks, airplanes, and all the flther tools nf war whirh thrv shnuld nnw hp learning to use? j "What little we had was sent I to Korea does Gov. Dewey ! understand that war production the manufacture of arms and muni tionsis our first need? the i men to yield those weapons can he i calletl and trained quickly enough, j when the weapons have been pro ; duced." j Shafer said "this purely and ' quite ill-advised radio speech, I , believe, was inspired by Dewey's I itch to get back into the national ! political arena" and to be the GOP presidential candidate agaifi. Methodist Church Calls ; For Nationwide Prayer I NASHVILLE. TENS'. t.Tfi The Methodist church's general board : of evangelism has called on churches throughout the oonr.trv to unite in "a mid-century prayer ! for peace" on DccqTI. . OThe board sairjrjV letter callinc lor loe pvnai uav 01 piayrr wt'lii i out to pastors of 42.000 Methodist 'churches embracing almost 9 000-i Ooo members. It urged pastors and ' congregations lo " help forge a() chain of prayer, beseeching God's i Euirianot! in converting a world crl i sis to 1 just and lasting peace." 1 goat's milk without worrying that it will grow up to look like a goal. But you can't take a gang of crew cuts out of Harvard and Vale every year and wean thorn on the Ache-son-Jossup-Rusk diet without get ting out of them about what is put in. In the State department they catch those kids young, fill their hea. with that kind of stuff, and then, before they are even 30 years old, pass them off on us as experts. For instance, take our ambassa dor to Korea, John Muccio. Muc cio should know better, since he was chased all over South Korea by the North Korean Communists. But he doesn't. Interviewed by Rep. Hugh Scott, of Pennsylvania, former chairman of the Republican National committee, Muccio said the Russians had every right to arm the North Koreans because the U. S. armed Chiang Kai-Sh and his hunch of crooks. He told Scott that we were not fighting ! Communists in Korea; he said that we were fighting aggression. Maybe you wonder why supposedly sane men make such statements while American boys are dying from Communist bullets in Korea. So do I. But there is one thin on which we probably can agree. It isn t simple idiocy, despite the fact that it looks like it. There is some un derlying reason for such sound I -hi,., .,aimpi. ,h nn the hi j o( ,nc Korean casualty lists, that I reason, whatever it may .be, isn't i -nvlhiAo thai it holnino ihis'cnun. ,..y GOT A KICK? If your paper has not been rectivtd by 4:15 p.m., PHONE 100 between 6:1 S and 7 p.m. ONLY Come in and Try Our Full Line Smorgasbord Specials for the HOLIDAYS SWEDISH and NORWEGIAN FISH CHEESE , MEATS BREAD LUTEFISK SANITARY MARKET i 315 West Cass 9 Uen'ii1 Wkistir 90 ! trial Thi striisht S, mm whiskies in 4 jurs 5 37 Vi strailitfliisli(f.$2,i mm Mtul spirits disUUeaJ lran(iii.lSstritilit whisker 4 yens (Id. S 15sliiilMiskei5 jeirsilt)',istriitit mm wuia Ji . Christmas Trees Given Churches By Senior Hl-Y The churrhos of Rnsoburg wore given Christmas trees by the Senior Hi-V of Rosebtirg hich school i'ne group gathered Ihe trees, Dec. 17. This ia an annual project for the Hi-V. Wednesday, Dec. 20. the Hl-Y and the Senior and Sophomore t'ri HiVs went Christmas caroling. Following the lour around Hose burg, the group was treated to I chili feed. The Hit officers for this year are: president. Vic Sanders: vice president. George Bloile; treas urer, Larry Cox; ser?eant-at-arms Larry Burr, and chaplain, Frank West. NEW TERM FOR MRS. F, R. WASHINGTON (.D Prosid dont Truman has nominated Mrs. Anna Eleanor Roose"lt, widow of the former presiden. for a now three-year term as United States representative on the U. N. human rights commission of th Economic and Social council. MOVING for small jobs or big, local or lonf diilance, phonet Roseburg Transfer & Storage PHONE 927 AGENTS FOR IONO DIITANCI MOVINS OK ICONOMY-UT US HANDLI Alt DETAILS of Phone 134 c&w s stands for Good Wliiskev 7 lilti. tm 1 o o 0