Sfx Fifty Years of Oregon Newspapers By Cwn Futoaae (Read at th Golden Jubilee of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association.) ' It Ii Just 60 years ago that the linotype, hitherto a lab nratnrv xneriment. waa first sold commercially. The ma chines were shipped over the protest of Ottmar Mergenthal r, their inventor, who left the company to work out improve ments, finally in 1890 bringing out a successful machine. It to Just to years since Frederick e. Ives, who died a lew days ago, in vented half-tone engraving, en abling tht prlntlnf of photograph, now a main feature of all publica tion. Later Mr. Ire Invented the three-color printing procesi, en abling tht printing of photograph, recently the polychromlc process and Btorles In natural color. Mechanical Improvement These Invention and many oth er hava contributed vitally to the perfection of production. Presses have been constantly improved In mechanism, as have trotyplng pro cesses. Electricity, unknown to the newspaper plant of 60 years ago. now turns the countless wheel a well aa lights the plants The teletype ha replaced the tele"- graph operator with hitherto un attainable speed In the sending of new, and the transmission or pho tos by wire and radio has become an actuality. In oner, au mecnan teal processes have been speeded up by science, for half a century ago neither the auto, the airplane, the radio, the movies nor countless other Inventions that have trans formed civilized life existed, save In the vision of some dreamers, Fifty years ago the type had to be set by hand, the typewriter was not In general use, the counting machine not yet Invented, the tele- shone was available to few, the In candescent light Just coming Into use. and the electrical age Just dawning. The first newspaper chain was still in It Infancy. Hearst had but recently acquired the Ban Francisco Examiner and was busy experimenting with sen cation. Pulitzer had but recently launched his venture In popular Journalism, the New York World. Leased wire were few and press association reports consisted most ly of skeletonized pony services. No Biz Limit Fifty years ago even city news papers consisted of four or eight pages, with an occasional splurge of U or IS. Now there Is no limit to the size of the papers, for there Is enough type, paper, press speed and news available. Not so In 1887, when there was neither sufficient type nor the time for setting It, even though printer averaged 12 hours and were paid by their "strings." The then limited pro duction ha been speeded up all along the line. Advertising In the modern tense Was unknown then to the smaller paper. It consisted principally of display cards that ran along with out change. National advertising was mostly patent medicines and quack cure-alls, though a few man ufacturers of standardized merch andise utilised the newspapers, In creasing in volume through the year since. But. we must remem ber, modern merchandising meth ods were comparatively unknown then. Basra Sense Lacking Fifty years ago circulation rates were higher than those of today. Lack of business methods handi capped many Journallstlo ventures. Partisanship and politics, rather than new, was the main objec tive. Gradually this ha changed and newspaper publishing has be come a standardized business. If Hot profession. The advertising manager and the circulation man ager have become skilled In their line of merchandising. Newspapers have become vast business enterprises, requiring capital In proportion to the com munltle served. The business has been standardized and aystema Used. The fly-by-nlght adventur er la definitely out of the picture. The personal Journalism of 50 year ago ha been largely super seded by the Impersonal one of the corporation, but the opportunity for the individual remains. A higher standard of ethics obtains. necessitated to maintain reader confidence. However, tome of the greatest newspaper successes of this half century have been built by viola tion of every code of ethics, through unscrupulous method!" GOOD FRIENDS iajxuawai' mmmmiiuimmL!mmmtm.pmwmwmmmmmr, verging on racketeering but the proportion It probably lower than In most businesses. It was the era of the economic royalist and news paperdom merely reflected the timet In an age when corporations dominated economle and political life and the people worshipped the golden calf. Many Fluctuation Fifty years' ago the west was In the midst of a fevered land boom that brought many people to the coast, settler and speculators, an era that saw the establishment of many newspapers, mostly born to die, created many millionaire of a day and was followed by the col lapse and panic of the early 90s Periodically since then the boom and depression cycle ha repeated the performance to make the pub lisher's game anything but Joy. One of the chief development! of the half century ha been the newspaper chain. They made pos sible economies tne Individual pub' Usher could not materialise. At the start, like other chains, they cut costs to the limit, paid the lowest possible wage and put out the cheapest possible paper. Bright and hopeful young men were hired for a pittance on the promise of future promotion, which either never materialized or, if It occa. tlonally did, along came a shake- up that eliminated all those with living wages and replaced them with young hopefuls. Those who rose to key positions frequently found the office boy supplanting them without notice. But at the paper grew In circulation and the publisher In wealth, publishers were forced to adopt better stand ards. Nowadays they hire "effi ciency experts" to do the dirty work. "One Born Every Mburter It was along about 60 years ago that some smart publishers discov ered the moron, long before he re ceived the title. They realized that a large percentage of humanity had low I. Q.'s, that the public schools were teaching these masses to read, If not to think, and that they want ed entertainment and amusement, and proceeded to cash In on the discovery. The "popular' papers with mass appeal rapidly attained great circulations and mad their owners millionaires. News was minimized, sensation, scandal and crime capitalized, frivolities re placed the important, the serial at tained prominence, the comic strip had a mushroom growth and a mul titude of feature unrelated to new filled the expanding column. The editorial decayed, but sports flour ished. Big type and words of one syllable added readers of the primer class. The auto and the radio be came new. Then in fevered pursuit of the moron, came the tabloid and the picture paper, attaining even larger circulations for the lack of Intellect required to understand. And now color It spreading It rainbow hues to attract the dullard. Quantity has replaced quality, as most newspap ers followed the popular trend, many forced to by competition, "What though the judicious grieve. the public like It and pay the freight- First 'Gay Divorcee' Scandalizes in 1846 Divorce reared Its ugly head In Oregon as early aa 1840, a WPA sur vey reveal. At that time, one Mary Ann Smith obtained a decree in provisional court, November S. The Jury turned a heeding ear to Mary's pleas, found "the allegations as set forth In the petition substan tiated" and gave to the supplicant "all the rights and Immunities of a slate of celibacy To Mrs. Smith went the dubious distinction of receiving the first divorce granted to a woman In Ore gon. Sale of radio set in France are about half those of a year ago and radio manufacturer are dismissing employes. GOOD FOOD J AvjT- GOOD "Tosi a Coin, Boys" Founder of Portland Flip For Naming of City If K had been "heads" in stead of "tall" Oregon's lar gest city would today be re ferred to as "Boston, Oregon." For it was by the flip of a cola m 146 that A. L. Love Joy, a native of Massachusetts, and F. W. Pettygrove, a na tive of Maine, settled the pri vilege of naming a city at the conduction of the Willamette and Columbia river. Pettygrove, the mas from Maine, won the flip and Im mediately christened the vil lage "Portland." after the metropolis of hi bom state. "Uncle Billy" Brooks, early settler m the Waldo Hill country, amassed a fortune of $50,000 and at his death bequeathed it all to foreign mis sions. His property he gave to the Methodist church, alto for foreign missionary work. 2040 Heating Technique Develops With Growth of Northwest From primitive times, home life has centered about the hearth. Savages wanted protection from wind, ice and rain; they built rude huts and roasted themselves in front of the fire. Pioneers came west, and with them they carried a fun damental desire for homes warm homes, protected from the elements. In 1837 a pioneer cabin was fortunate if it possessed a smoldering fireplace and a stone bake-oven. Many were the trials and tribulations of housewives in those days. Their day was full, and cooking remained a deli cate and harassing art. Stone ovens supplied both heat for cooking and for warmth, for early settlers were economical. According to R. C. Clark's "History of the Willamette Valley," a visitor to the valley in 1845 could say: "With the box or frame house comes the In- evltabl stove. Th cooking and eating of the family go on In a lean-to room. . . Even In that day, notes the visi tor, th fir and stove was a warm and ingratiating influence. To my eye,' he writes, "there 1 some thing rarfly comfortable In the Enjoy Year 'Round Comfort Winter or Summer Economically . t .... w ' 'l II l Htl 'i f 'i i h , y - i,-. A Jy: ,. ...... V.i' ia. V - - fef , i . u . ' s . i , i 4 k. . y , 'lwsaH'artWlaaMBJM CASPAR and CUTLER North Capital Capital low, solid, rugged walls of gray logs, with overhanging shingled roof; th open hearth, too, -with Its great smoldering back-log and wide chimney, invites you to sit down before it and rest." They Had Their Trouble The picture was Idyllic. But v .; A a, ' l '"' 1 ' " 1 -'. . , j. ,v ... , .... Location Of One Of Salem's Winter or Summer, You Will Have That Same Uniform Temperature All Over the House Cool in Summer .... Warm in Winter. Call Us and Let Us Explain How Reasonably This Plant Can be Installed Journal Golden Anniversary and Capitol Dedication there are many references to the fireplaces that "went wrong" oc casionally, driving out occupant of the house in uncontrolled haste. "If people of today could go back to the pioneer days, they'd find It pretty hard to adjust themselves," asserted Herman Cutler, of the Caspar and Cutler heating firm. "Maybe it's Just because people are getting lazy I" Cutler, who ha viewed the pro gress In heating equipment dur ing the past two decades, insisted that the predominant demand is for comfort in heating. After pioneer days cam the Round Oak coal stove, the "trash burners" and wood grates. It al ways remained for soma member of the household to carry out ashes, and the draft into a room was end less. The only way in which radia tion of heat could be approximated was by placing the stove in the middle of the room. (I f.1Sii Most Important Industries Salem, Oregon Oraduallv. a a farmer or merch ant prospered, he Installed more elaborate heating facilities. That tendency has accounted I or ins larm huftiniu now being served by heating companies. Cutler aald. Caspar and culler, in inree yca of existence, hss built itself up as the second largest heating firm In the state, with a valuation of $J0,- 000 When the firm started la 1M6, It was valued at $2500. Caspar and Cutler doe an an nual business of $76,000. In com parison to the modest 18000 total it met In Its first year. Th number of employes has Jumped from one to 14. Oil and Ca Popular Oil and gas heating systems have been subjected to a large Increase In rntir stated. He esti mated that In 1937. the demand for gas and oil systems together, ac- innntA for sit ner cent Of th to tal, indicating a departure from the request for wood nesting. In addition, he said, 61 per cent of the heating systems Installed were accompanied by air -conditioning process. Caspar and Cutler now boasts the orilv "elbow machine" In the Wil- 1 fi4-v t- 1 vvS " i il II ! lllllwawJlMst. M . - 'J '. 1 ., ... ' ' ? gsg krt si Dial Edition lamett. guaranteeing a large out put. The firm alto has a 300 too press. Seven truck and three ear ar now employed, contrasted to the aingl automobll that the com psny started out with In 1(36. The company ha also purchased a new set of roll and shear for one-half inch boilerplate. Cutler disclosed. It also possesses the only spot-welder In the valley, which can be used in place of riv eting. Caspar and Cutler I agent for th Frailer gas furnace, which ha shown wide popularity here la the past year. Nicholas Caspar went Into th furnace business In 193. at the present location. Herman Cutler entered in 135. Although the partnership of Ca. par and Cutler extends only over the past three years, the firm had It root In th effort of Dave Stelner over 60 years ago. Stelner was assisted In his development of furnaces by F. H. Berger, his son-in-law. In 1931. Caspar, who had worked with th company, bought an Interest, Brazil wants It foreign debt based on its "economic capacity to pay." 7419 And when It's over, more than one I sure to say: "The best meal I aver had." W are certain you will say the same after eating at THE OOLDEN PHEASANT. The foods are tht finest, freshest obtainable, price are pleating, too, AT THB BION OF JHE GOLDEN PHEASANT 14S NORTH LIBERTY