PAGE FOURTEEN HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2. 10n2 Oil Gunsmithing Class Nov; Tops In United States Car Manufacturers Worry uver Restrictions max May Cut National Output MHMMMMKKBMMBMlAllli Bllii fill T I l illBMBBWWWIIWIIIMIill? . MTijVjk CONSTANTINO SANDOVAL checks the fit of a barrel and A CHAMBER REAMING job occupies Earl Sweet (left), HEAT TREATING Forrest Hoover (left), Phoenix, Ariz., stock. t Drain, and James W. Crosswell, Camas, Wash. 1 and Robert L. Cake. Gevserville, Calif., use a tempering lurnace. v ' R , ".) win ' yjitut if; m "Ml BLUING Finishing touch is applied to parts by Don Watchman (left), Silverton, and FINAL OK Herbert Butler (center), Freewater, shows a finished product and wins Jim Yoder, Portland. . By WALLACE MYERS Robust young OTI not content with being one of the nation's fast est growing schools is also making quite a name for itself scholastical- iy. In the category of gunsmithing, for instance, Oregon Tech leads the entire country in enrollment and has a solid claim to having the finest course. Seventy students now enrolled In OTI's gunsmithing course give the school the size championship hands down. And as for quality of instruc tion, the UA Army's Ordnance Department appears to think OTI funsmiths lead the nation. At east, the Ordnance Department's smiling approval of instructors George Harper (left) and Walter Phillips (right). Ily DAVID , J, WII.K1E A Automotive Ddltor DETROIT Ml Twelve million piiNNoiiKor emu were built In the punt two yours ami another 0,000,. DUO will bo needed thin year. At louxt that's the claim of many cur bulUtci'H, smai'llUK under rn NtrlutloiM that promise to limit 1062 car output to not more limn 4,000,000 uiiltn. Home inumiliioturers claim re placement riumund ulono will ub .iorb nil puKfluuuor cur output un less production uuotua aro aubstiiu llnlly liivrcused. New cur sales have limned In recent weeks, Some sales munn Dors linvo attributed the drop to the Imminence of new models. How imii'li model, chunuc-overa linvo affeeted new enr nulrs noon will bo determined; most 11)53 mod els, especlnlly tlio turtle volume mukes liuve now been introduced with the new Ford nppeurnnce thin week. All Industry experts don't aiiree mother 6,000,000 new cars can be sold thin yrur. Some uv fnctory output would nut reach that (Inure even It nil mulerlnls restrictions suddenly were lifted. As some experts view the Indus try's outlook a nhnrply Intensified sales eflnit will bo needed this yeur to sen 1.UUU.UUU curs, . Yet sales executives Buy Unit there Is nil iinniuil market for t.ooo. 000 new curi for many yearn ahead. Anulysta who wiitrh anlen very closely nay the car buyliiK publlu Is becomliiK InoiTiislimly prlco cons cious, l'rlccs have Honor up ma lorlnlly In the past year on most mnken of enrn and moro Increases currently nre being applied or are being worked out. Muny moUiilsts (Inure Uint an new cur list prices no up no do the trade-in allowances .on their one nnd two year old enrs. Hut the pricing nltiinllon doesn't alwaya work out that way, excepting in cases where drnlern have more earn llinn orders on hand. Thero are some such dealers In certain neclloun of tho country, but there In Utile price discounting on new IVM mixlel curs. In most In slaurea the price cuts are on 1D61 models which drnlern were unnbln to move bcluro the new cars enmo in. Latest surveys Indicate used rur nales nre higHlng pretty much Uie same an new car deliveries. Fantastic Salaries Told As AEC Men Start Probe Of Labor 'Pirating' Story LAS VEOA9, Nev. Wl An I lower linn been erected nuou J Atomic Energy Commission hear lug bus uncovered that a wire splicer received S175.60 n week for his spcclitlUrd work on the A EC's Nevada Proving Grounds. E. J. Mitupln Jr., president of the Dodgo Construction Co., of Fal lon, Nov., testified at the flnul ses sion Friday night Uiat the splicer. . . T. Singleton, was employed 40 hours a week on regular time and B'J j hours on an overtime basis. lie said Singleton was released from the Nnvy (or the Job at the Abe refltiest. and that he was here only during the lime his services were needed. Maupln's firm has two projects under construction at the atom test site. Other witnesses testified that high wages puld by lluddock Engi neers, Ltd. almost paralyzed some of Las Vegas' Industrial activities. iioy Flippln, secretary of the Employers' Association of Booth- em Nevada, said Haddock was paying $100 a day for roofers and mat oilier workers got from $300 to SiHK) s week. The hearlnir was called after the McNeil Construction Co., which lost a sOol.000 fixed ice contract lor failure to complete Its work on schedule, complained that Haddock piruiva its moor. Newsmen attending the hearing were permitted lor the first time Inside the henvlly-wallcd control building at Yucca Flats, scene of the atomic tests Inst fall. The visit disclosed apparent preparedness for additional atom explosions which may be held early In the spring. The newsmen were convoyed bv uniformed security guards and were restricted only from the con trol room, containing a labvrlnth of classified instruments. A new out 15 miles from the building where sci entists lust fall observed the ex plosions, 'the new tower appeared to be uuuut 300 feet high. Five miles north of the control point are a cluster of buildings be lieved to be new tent Installations built since Uie last detonation. Ship Owners File Appeal PORTLAND tfl The owners of Uie Danish motorshlp Errla, which burned at the mouth of the Columbia Itlver with the loss ot II lives Inst Dec. 30, asked Friday to be freed of liability hi the disaster. The firm, East Asiatic Co., Copenhagen. Denmark, also asked In a petition filed In Federal Court hero that liability be limited to loss of lite and property. ine petition said that "all 31 nf the passengers aboard Uie Errla were roused and reached the boat deck." Seven passengers already have filed property Ions claims total', I: sn.aso. Two death dumngo cls.tifi ioihi ju,b.-)U. Serve a salad for a first course sometime. Celery stuffed with a mixture of cream and Roquefort cheese, cut Into one-or to-lnch lengths, and arrnnged on shredded lettuce In a good choice; drltle the lettuce with a wcll-neanoned French dressing boforg adding the celery wedges. qualifications for civilian arma ment artisans stiupulate that they shall be OTI graduates or having an eaucation "the equivalent there of." Touring the OTI gunsmithing de partment this week was an eye opening experience for this report er. I knew gun work was a highly specialized field requiring top-quality craftsmenship but I was amazed at the intricate layout on the mile high campus. George Harper, one of the four gunsmithing instructors at OTI. showed me around and explained the gist of the course. The OTI course requires a mini mum of two years. And before a student may enroll, he must be Federal Gambling Tax , Cuts Illegal Gaming In US By 90 Percent--So Far WASHINGTON Wl A revenue official says the new federal gam. bllng tax has virtually halted ille gal gambling In the United States but he added: I don't know now long the honeymoon will last." . Eugene Coy le, the Revenue Bu reau's expert on the gambling tax, said Thursday the new tax has choked off 90 per cent of the na tion s estimated zo billion dollar a year illegal gambling business. Coyle said "most of the big time gamblers have closed shop" be cause they are afraid to reveal their Illegal operations to police, the public and the press as the new law requires. In another development, the Federal Communications Commis sion ordered a probe Into how gamblers are using Western Union telegraph wires. Western Union had proposed to put new regulations governing transmission of horse and dog rac 1ng news into effect midnight Thursday night, but tne fcc or clered a postponement until May 3 to give it tune to noid puunc Hearings. Regarding the federal gamblers tax, Coyle gave these ngures: A total of 8,913 gamblers over the nation bought tax stamps in December compared with 1,556 In November, the first month under the law. Most of these were petty . dealers In states where punch' hoards are legal. A breakdown of taxes and stamps shows that business In November was best in Ohio, where gamblers paid in 10 per cent of a take of $383,020 . . . Louisiana Was second with $351,770, in total business and Illinois third with $282,020. As for gamblers registered. Wash- Ineton State was first with $70. 109 collected for tax stamps. Illi nois was second with $61,063, Mon tana third with $43,837, and Ohio fourth with $26,672. The high returns from Washing ton and Montana are partly ac counted for by Uie fact that punch boards are permitted in those states. Freight Rate Progress Made WASHINGTON UP) The long haul toward uniform freight rates throughout the nation is a step nearer the partial reality due next May 30. On that date uniform rates go in to effect east of the Rocky Moun tains. The railroads began Friday filing with the Interstate Com merce Commission new class rates Under Whir.h an Itjim. mau ha .hln. ped anywhere In the area at a mile age rate mai disregards geograph ic boundaries. The rates will not apply west of the Rockies until further ICC pro ceedings. Class rntpn nnrmnllv anntu in a single item, particularly manufac- To. make a quick sunner dish mix cooked elbow macaroni, flaked tuna fish, and grated onion, with a medium cream sauce. Pile into a casserole, too with buttered crumbs, and heat In a moderate oven. both a finished welder and ma chinist. Once in the gunsmithing course. the student begins studying under four expert instructors. Besides Harper, there are Al Winkelman, Frank Alley and Walt Phillips, son of Ralph Phillips, widely-famed tuamam fails gunsmith. Harper, who formerly had a gun shop in Portland, beads the Har per Manufacturing Company here and holds patents on several gun parts and tools. Harper, with justifiable Dride in his profession, points out that many of our most important machine tools were invented and developed by gunsmiths. He talks of long-ago gunsmiths whose mechanical ar tistry led to great inventions . . . Gunsmith Gottlieb Daimler, the German who made the world's first automobile, the Mercedes- Benz; and Eli Whitney, who paused in his gunsmithing to make the cotton gin. Oregon Tech's fame In the field has spread rapidly. Students have come here lrom all over the nn tlon and three neighboring states, Idaho. Washington and California, use the course in their rehabilita tion program. Although the OTI students are not permitted to do outside work (except free Jobs lor triends) the class does do all gun work for both the Oregon State Police and Game Commission. One of the most interesting pieces ol work turned out was a special rifle for the Game Com mission. The Commission, long anxious to check on effects of seals on salmon, needed an extremely accurate and high-powered rillc. The gun was to be used in picking off seals as they entered the mouth of the Rogue River. To properly do the Job, so as not to Injure the seals' digestive organs, a long range gun with which the seals could be shot in the brain cavity was needed. That meant the gun would have to be able to send a bullet over long stretches of water and into about a one-Inch target. The OTI gunsmiths went to work and came up with a .270 rifle that is a joy to behold. , It's a big gun, weighing some !5 pounds, but it has the accuracy of a fine target rifle. If such a gun were available on the market It would cost at least $600, Instruc tor Hurper says. But coming from OTT, the gun cost the Game Commission only $200 for materials. All labor was free OTI's gunsmith graduates aren't having any trouble finding work: they're grabbed up as noon as their Instructors decide they're readv to go out on their own. Right now. there's a list of jobs ready and waiting for OTI graduates. If you're interested in guns, you'll thoroughy enjoy seeing the OTI setup. liSRSrW'- A - TIP, No.3 THIRD IN A SERIES OF AIDS FOR THE BEGINNERS AND HOVE PHOTOGRAPHERS. DISAPPOINTMENT RESULTS WHEN SNAPSHOTS ARE BADLY "BLURRED." STUDY THESE TIPS AND AVOID MANY SNAPSHOT FAILURES. r i I" j Ctpmt Hp tm4f,ar asntt Ht la your kto Iwofc How to Improve Your Snapshot 'BLUR" in Snapshots TRIPODS FOR ALL CAMERAS CAMERA I REPAIR : SERVICE j HOME ! DEVELOPING ) OUTFITS ' Blurred picture result generally from one of three causes: 1. Poor Focus (in focusing cameras) 2. Movement of the subject 3. Movement of the camera by the 6perator. Using the average home camera, which does not have to be focused, almost all"blurred"photos result from No.3. True, the subject some j times moves, but slight movements by the subject are not as damag ing to the picture as, even very slight movement of the camera. SOLUTION use a tripod or rest the camera on some solid surface. There are many practical tripods in the lower price range. You will be happier with your pictures. If you feel that "focus" is the cause of your trouble bring your cam- era in for a check-up. Our staff is anxious to help you. tm MAY WE HELP YOU? Staffed by men who KNOW PHOTOGRAPHY L mnnimiiiiimua Pllllllllllllllll(8llll It took just three days ! . FOR FARMER'S INSURANCE TO SETTLE A $1775.00 CLAIM WITH THIS KLAMAH FALLS MAN! Just three days after his car was demolished in a L. Garrett (Right) of Klamath Falls receives a check for $1775.00 from Farmer's Insurance Agent, Harry R, hear. THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED . . . ON JANUARY 23 , . . James L. Garrett's car was completely demolished in a collision with a truck three miles north of Klamath Falls. ON JANUARY 24th . . . Garrett, a Farmer's Insurance Croup Policy Holder, reported the accident to agent Harry R. Lanp hear, ON JANUARY 25th ... an accurate estimate of damages was determined and Garrett received a check for $1775.00! The next day he was driving a new car! Yes ... to many Insur ance buyers this prompt settlement is unusual. But with cus tomers of FARMER'S INSURANCE GROUP . . this fait service is taken for granted! FARMER'S INSURANCE GROUP AUTO-FIRE-TRUCK 1016 Main HARRY R. LANPHEAR Phone 6923 JACK CLINTON CHARLES BOLESTA WOODY WALP Lakeview Ph. 3012 Merrill . Ph. 8501 K. Falls - Ph. 2-1047 K. Falls - Ph. 2-3027 ( ELLIS OCHS i