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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1952)
.' Kegfttor-Gtnarfl, Eugene, Ore., y PoQe 3Q Thurs,, Aug. 21, 1952 I Eagles Haunting I Antelope Herd l Animals Now Afraid ' To Roam Prairie DEER LODGE, Mont., Aug. 11 (ff) Gclden eagles have been haunting a herd of antelope in Deer Lodge Valley, high in the Hockies. "One entire herd of 135 ante lope is spooked," says Deputy Game Warden Les Barton. "The animals are afraid of their own shadows." One doe was seen steering her two fawns out of a grassy mea dow and up a mountain side, where pine trees hide them from the beady-eyed "king of the air." But now and then man helps the harrassed antelope. Marvin Peace of Deer Lodge was out in the valley with his rifle recently when he saw an eagle circling in the sky. Suddenly, the bird folded its wings and plunged to earth in one swift swoop. A few feet from the ground the eagle threw out its wings, braking the dive, and stabbed its sharp talons in to the back of an antelope fawn, Pcarce ran to his jeep and bounced away to the scene of the attack. Ho said he was 450 yards from the eagle when the bird took off. Despite the extreme range, Pcarce took sight and fired. With a flutter of feathers, the eagle fell. Pcarce brought both eagle and antelope home to show his friends. Game Warden Barton says a study of the Deer Lodge ante lope herd indicates eagles have been killing an average of one fawn a day since June 1. Searchers are looking for the eagles' nest. Meanwhile an armed watch has been set up to protect the antelope from attack. Curry County Doubles Size SALEM (U.R) Expansion of lumbering in Curry county and stepped up dam bunding in Uma' tilla county gave those two areas the lead among 36 Oregon coun ties in pay roll gains for the first three months of 1952, the State Unemployment Commission re ported Wednesday. Oregon's 17,488 covered em ployers reported $279,759,339 paid during the first quarter to an av erage of 305,818 employes. The number of workers dropped 0.7 per cent, but pay rolls were 4.9 per cent higher than in early 1951 the commission said. Plywood and other new mills in the southwest corner of the state helped Curry county's wages to more than double in the past year, jumping from $653,841 to $1,323 851. Of 1,418 workers reported last March, 1,000 were in wood prod ucts, which had 82 per cent of the pay rolls in the county. More than half of Umatilla county's $8,301,802 reported wages were from construction, including 3,380 of the 8,271 covered work ers. Its pay roll Increase was 42.6 per cent. Other counties gaining more than 10 per cent since the first quarter of 1951 were Harney, Clatsop, Wasco, Coos, Hood River, Jefferson, Tillamook, and Douglas. Multnomah's 6,065 employers paid out $128,400,213 for the highest first quarter since the war. but the number of employes dropped to an average of 138,428, down 1,352. Lane county in second place followed a similar pattern, but uougias, next in timber output, gained three per cent in employ ment and 10.4 per cent in wages, Coos, another big lumber area, hold forth place, while Marion, Linn and Umatilla were next with Jackson dropping to eighth. PERTINENT QUESTION TUPELO, Miss. (U.R) When two-year-old Timmy Eobinson disappeared, frantic searchers, sure ho hod fallen into a 20-acre lake near his homo, began drag ging the body of water. Two hours later young Timmy, a popsicle in each hand, walked up and asked scarcliers, "Whatcha lishing for? f.s sit f&Wf IS TASTIER!... 7& IS "TOPS" I.. , m$vtf$ IS THRIFTY, TOO) j . Trj'. , . compare ... see how Tang' v maic "fliivor factor" brings out all - the goodness; adds new Zest and sparkle io all your disbes! . ..v 'I T.'V-.. J . ENVOY BOYLE SAYS li's Really A Man's World lis NEW U. S Llewellyn E. Thompson, Jr., above, 47, of Las Animas, Colo,, was named by President Tru man as U. S. Ambassador and High Commissioner for Austria. Teenage Girl Found Beaten PALM SPRINGS, Calif (P) The battered body of a teen-age girl, clad only in a plaid blouse, was found Wednesday on a high way near this desert resort. A few hours later she was iden tified as Cathryn Knodel, 16, of Rcdlands. Her mother, Mrs. Erwin Knodel, viewed the girl's body in a mor gue and screamed: "That's her, that's her." The girl's parents said they re turned home Tuesday night and found a note saying that she had gone out. Her father said he presumed she had gone to a musical pro gram at Redlands Bowl. Brown-haired, slender and at tractive, the girl was found in a pool of blood at the edge of a road near Thousand Palms, about a half-mile from heavily-traveled U. S. Highways 60, 70 and 99. Police Chief August Kettmann of Palm Springs said sand and brush in the girl's hair indicated her body was dragged. He said her death apparently was caused by the beating. By HAL BOYLE AisocUtrd rresi Staff Wrllfr NEW YORK Who enjoy life more men or women? Often a woman sighs, "this is a man's world. I wish I had been born a man." She probably doesn't really mean it. On the other hand, who ever heard of a man wishing he would become a woman in his next resurrection? His sex has its troubles but he wouldn't trade them for the strange dim woes of womanhood, woes he can sense but never fully understand. Like the rooster, he feels he has more to crow about. MAN CREATURE OF LIBERTY Man at least in his youth is a robust and romantic adventur er. He is a creature of liberty. He can go where he wants to and do what he wants to, and meets a minimum of criticism. Woman is a creature of duty, still hemmed in by old traditions despite her new freedoms, All her gambles are quiet ones. And so are most of her pleasures. I have always regarded women as wiser, more stable, and tougher-minded than men. But the physicial ordeal of their lives ap palls me. A man can meet a new day with a yawn, a shower, and a shave. But a woman is a lot of trouble to herself. She must strug gle into the grim confines of i girdle expanding as much en ergy as a man does in half a day's work and spend an hour ar ranging her hair and rearranging her features. ENDLESS REPAIR JOB All day long this endless repair job goes on, and she is never free of a gnawing inner worry "am I putting my best face forward?" This need of always looking her best makes her a lifelong pris oner of a mirror. And as she grows older the mirror doesn't tell her any welcome news. That, as I see it, is one of the really tough things about being woman. The ordinary male would lose his mind if he had to look at himself in a mirror so often and so long. Or am I just kidding myself? It seems to me that men have much more fun and variety in life than women. SAME DIRTY DISHES Their jobs may become boring at times, but no machine has been invented to remove the mo notony of most women's job housework. How can they go on cheerfully washing the same dirty dishes, year after year? After marriage a man usually has room in his life for friends But for most women love lakes the place of friendship; her fam ily is her whole existence. And too often a woman finds her husband acts less and less like a lover and more and more like a problem child. If there is any kicking up of heels, he does it. Her world Is fully of little responsibilities she can never shirk or take a vaca tion from. She not only does the child bearing. She does most of the child caring. PAMPER THE OAF'S EGO She must spend a great deal of her time pampering the ego of the oaf she is wedded to, for he is never quite sure he is the great guy he thinks he is unless she keeps up the applause. Yes, there is no doubt about it. Men have it better than wom en. I felt this so strongly the other day that I told my wife I felt rather sorry for her. She just laughed and said I was mixed up. "Women don't need any pity," she said. "It feels nice to be a woman. If men enjoy life more than women, then why don't they live as long as women?" Well, fellows, why don't we? 'Star' Editor Dies KANSAS CITY (VI Henry J, Haskell, 78, edilor of the Kansas City Star, died Wednesday. A member of the Star's staff 54 years, Haskell became director of the editorial page in 1910 and had been editor since 1928. He was a director and vice president of the Kansas City Star Company. Gl Planning Tour' Return WITH 25TH DIVISION, Korea Cpl. Ray Bohn of St. Louis, Mo., is due to be rotated in September from the famed Wolfhound In fantry Regiment but he wonders if he will get home by Christmas. The reason: Back in June he wrote a dozen newspapers asking for mail. He was deluged with about 100 letters a day and from them he has found 25 girl friends who want him to visit them on his way to St. Louis from the Pa cific Coast. Bohn is studying maps and plans to visit all of them except a girl in Omaha, which he says Is too far off his route. Moro Bandits Slip From Police Grasp MANILLA (JP) Datu Kamlon and his Moro bandits slipped out of a trap forged by 1,700 govern ment troops on jungled Jolo Is land and took refuge Tuesday in the almost-impenetrable man grove swamps along the north east coast. Weary Army troops, fighting fa tigue and disease, inched into the swamplands after the Mohame dan outlaw. Report from Jolo said Kamlon's band had shrunk to less than 100 men during the 11-day government campaign. RTfENJMENTI Po"your WEEK-END MrSUMMERt i sun. i make fun of TqurTthirst with I F a ni vmdi a I lainHrrHini in iiw LYMPIA BREWING CO, Olympll, Wash, U.S. A. 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