Ethel, if newspapers have had their day then there won't be any to look at on your eReader; they'll have gone bust. You'll have to rely instead on TV news - and I believe their viewing figures are also in slow decline - or news websites. The latter are not necessarily reliable. If you read the Telegraph, you know a long-respected name is responsible for giving you the news (this doesn't mean it will always be accurate, but there will be someone to carry the can if it isn't). If you see a story on the Drudge Report, who knows whether it's any more accurate than anything in the News of the World or those American newspapers that carry reports of Elvis being found on the moon?
Newspapers have other functions, of course: carrying opinion pieces, gossip, entertainment listings and so on. These are more easily replicated online. But the retailing of actual news comes down to who you'd trust to give it to you straight - or of course whether you could care less. It seems quite a few younger Americans thought the Georgia that was invaded by Russia was the state in the southern USA; clearly, they're not paying too much attention to public affairs anyway.