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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1958)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TITSDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1953 :..:.!. Never Put Trust In Horse Comments Gary Cooper Bv BOB THOMAS i "It hurts." Cooper confessed. ST GEORGE, Utah. 'AP "c explained: "It's painful for "The horse is a hishiv overrated me to be n the saddle too long, animal. They're dumb as hell. "" because of an injury nd vou can t trust them one bit." 1 S from a horse. When I was Heresv vou sav? Perhaps, but getting started in pictures. I used mir anthnritv is none other than ' talfe horse falls for 15 a fall Garv Conner, one of the few starsland ' never bad a scratch v.ith an authentic Western back ground. The rangy Montanan gazed up at the red bluffs of this southern I'tah wilderness and reflected: "When I was 14 or 15. I used to ride alone for days through coun try like this." One thing he learned: never trust a horse. Contrarily. he has learned an other axiom in more than 30 years of loping through the movie scene: always trust a borse opera. Yup, Oie Coop is back in the saddle again after ventures into sports cars and limousines. After two middling films, "Love in the Afternoon" and "10 North Fred erick," he has done three horse back pictures in a row. His latest, "They Came to Cor dura," is being filmed in Utah. It's technically not a Western, hut there are plenty of horses. Producer William Goe'.z assem bled 300 horses and riders to re create the last U. S. Cavalry charge during General Pershing's invasion of .Mexico in 1916. The rest of the picture largely con cerns the trek of Cooper and five others across the .Mexican waste land "But I did a lot of skiing after the war, and that's what banged me up. Newcomers might find profit in a credo that might help explain Cooper's amazing three decades ai a star: "I always made it a point to do at least one Western every two years. In years when I did four pictures, usually one of them would be a Western. Hunters' Goose Cooked By Too Many Geese Two hunters who had come from the Oregon Coast to hunt in Lake County were arrested on Satur day for having too many geeese in tneir possession. The men. Gene Mathew Lcm mer. 45. and Donald Guv Shore ;3i, both of Coquille. were arrested at Warner Valley public hunting area by federal game manage ment agents on October 18. The men entered pleas of guilty the same day before U.S. Corn- Hour Hoes it feel in ho hr, ; missioner bert L. Thomas in . , a horse? bOQRS CPEN 6:30 NOW! omr jan PECKSIMMONS HROIl CHARITON BUM BAKER HESTON IVES U:..Msra? THE -BIG-COUNTRY I in TECHNICOLOR I I , rB TECHNIRAMA I Klamath Falls and each paid line ot S250. The 25 geese, 12 over the legal limit of birds in possession, have been delivered to the Klamath Nursing Home on Summers Lane. Four County Men To Enter Army Two cousins will be included in Klamath County's draft contingent for October, which consists of just three men all volunteers. The cousins are Jerry Alois Raj mis, 19, Star Route, Malin, a son of County Commissioner and .Mrs. Jerry Rajnus, and William Joseph Rainus, Box 63. Malin. The third volunteer is Paul Ar thur Svoboda, 19, now living at 240 Bcrrydale Avenue in Medford. Svo-I hoda's Klamath Falls address is 2020 Arthur Street. A fourth man also will leave for service but not under the draft quota 'DENNIS THE MENACE" Stock, Bond Speculation Causes Eyebrow Raising By ELMER C. WALZER I PI Financial Editor NEW YORK (I'Pli The usual hue and cry against speculators that appears each time there is a margin increase is in the air again. One can speculate in real estate, in soybeans, in diamonds, or in paper cups and no one says any thing about it. But when one 6lKA GIVES ME A PAW WHH THAT 'ARMEPECI STUFF Labor Has Little Luck In Repealing Work Laws By RAYMOND LAI1R United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) - Organ ized labor has met with little sue cess so far in its campaigns to overturn right-to-work laws in states which have adopted such statutes. The laws still are in force in 18 states. In some cases, the mo mentum behind repeal apparently has become progressively weaker as tune wears on. Union leaders are- fighting to block enactment of such laws this year in California, Colorado, Ida ho, Kansas, Ohio and Washington, where the issue will be on the ballot for the Nov. 4 election. They also hope to help elect an Indiana legislature to repeal a law enacted last year and legis latures in other states to repeal hlnrlr enarlment nf rioht.ln. He is Jimmy Lyon Alston, 'WOrk iaws 19. 2140 Wantland Avenue, Klam ath Falls. The men will leave here Octo ber 27 for induction at Portland lid subsequent basic training at i'ort Ord, California. Mail Gifts Early Says Post Office WASHINGTON (UPI) Families nf servicemen overseas should do their Christmas gift mailing by Nov. 20 to assure delivery at foreign posts by Dec. 25. A Defense Department state ment also urged that packages be securely wrapped in cartons of wood, metal, or double faced corrugated fiber hoard. DOORS CPfcN b.AU P. M Ends TONITEf "Sreel Bayonet" 'Lafayette Ejcodrille" Starts WEDNESDAY! Zj Deborah KERR - Robert M ITCH U M k4 Such laws outlaw union shop contracts and other labor-manage ment agreements which require employes to belong to unions to hold their jobs. Among the states which adopted full-blown right to work laws, only Louisiana has put through a re peal. The Louisiana legislature enacted a law in 1954 and repeal ed it in 1956 after labor asserted it had played a part in unseating some 70 members who originally- had voted for the measure. After repealing the general law. the Louisiana lawmakers passed another applying only to agricul tural and certain processing em ployes. Supporters of the general Lou isiana law said 481 million dollars was invested in new industry dur ing the first five months of 1956 while the statute was in force Foes of the law countered that investments ran as high as 900 ! million a year when there was no right to work law. The Maine legislature approved a bill in 1947 to outlaw the closed shop, under which new employes must be union members when i hired, but to permit the union shop, under which new employes 4lTiIWi7!rnTl;TTTTli OPEN DAILY 6:00 P.M. Mew Hits i o: 1 3 r.rvv .yt ( MAGAZINE ft j lit V, I ScandaUnc: ROBERT HUTTON Ai & 4J a Hi i!!"Vi M SHOWN AT 1 rX "BTmi i 1 ! Toastmistresses Schedule Dinner Mt. Mazama Toastmistrcss Club will meet for a 6:30 p.m. dinner at the Willard Hotel on Thursday- October 23. Leigh Fenning will have the opening. Eve Morey. flag salute, and Virginia Fuller will be the lexicologist. Kunice Bunnell will serve evaluator: Kdna Howell, timer; Jackie Hibbard. topicmistress hannie Mae Thompson, toastmis trcss. Floyd Wynne, city editor of the Herald and News, will be guest speaker. Leigh Fenning will give the rules for the speech contest: Doris Abernathy will serve as ana lyst. Three nanws for impromptu speakers will be drawn for the eve ning. Members will wear Halloween costumes. Gilchrist Club Holds Meeting CRESCENT The Gilchrist Gar den Club met Wednesday eve ning, October 15. at the Gilchrist Methodist Church with 15 mem bers present. The group voted to again spon sor a Camp Fire Girls group this year. Mrs. Vera Rochek showed slides of Hawaii the had taken during her vacation to the island this summer. Mrs. Charles Shotts, who had lived in Hawaii tor sev eral years, contributed two Hawai ian hula dance numbers to the program. Hostoses were Dorothy Houston and Mrs. Vern Kochek. who in keeping with the Hawaiian theme, wore Hawaiian rohes while serv ing relreshments. The next meet ing will be a field trip, No ember ,15. t gather ry n,a:r:;s. COAVALLK 4f' - Corvallis wits will rk4 it approve a t.iw ond .-;. at a p.-i- ' f.aion in February. T;i money needed for the nrst t proposed water astern j!r()roveinent program. tThe bonas would be pa.! oif by ljn incri'j.- in City water u'.ct, must join the union within 30 days. This law was not enforced pend ing a referendum vote in the 1948 election, when a right-to-work proposition also was submitted to the voters. Both were defeated. Delaware enacted a bill in 1947 declaring merely that union se curity agreements were against public policy and that it was not an unfair labor practice for an employer to refuse to grant closed or union shop. This law was repealed in 1949. The New Hampshire legislature passed in 1947 and repealed in 1949 a bill outlawing union secur ity agreements for firms with five or less employes. It also set up certain conditions to be met for such contracts in larger compan ies. Besides Maine, right-to-work measures were defeated in refer endum votes in California in 1944, Massachusetts and New Mexico in 1948 and Washington in 1956. They also have been introduced in the legislatures of 17 other states, which failed to pass them. Both Arizona and Nevada have approved right-to-work laws three times. In each case, the first vote was favorable and the law was supported by increased majorities in two later repeal efforts. The Tennessee law, enacted in 1947, has not become a major po litical issue. Repeal efforts have grown progressively weaker and no serious repeal effort was made in the last legislative session is 1947. In a number of other states, re peal drives have foundered and in some of them labor leaders have abandoned hope for action; in the near future. I Cattlemen To Convene The Klamath Cattlemen's Asso ciation will hold its annual meet ing on Wednesday, October 22, at 7 p.m., at Klamath County Fair grounds. Previously the annual meeting was held in February, but it was decided at the state con vention at Ontario earlier this year to hold the election of officers in the fall instead of spring. The county association meetings and the state association have synchro nized their annual meeting dates. W. F. (Bill! Marshall, president of the county group, stated that several very important problems will come up for discussion on Wednesday evening. Some definite action will be called for on some of the measures and he urges ev ery cattleman to attend. Among the subjects to be dis cussed will be all phases of brand inspection, including the possible increase in fees and the problems connected with securing convic tions in theft cases. Henry Mat schiner, supervising livestock offi cer with the State Department of Agriculture, Salem, will be here to participate in these discussions. Marshall said that consideration will be given to creating a fund to pay a reward for information lead ing to the arrest and conviction of cattle thefts. Another item to receive atten tion at the meeting will be the truck and rail rate reductions on dressed meat moving from east to west, without corresponding rate reduction in rates on live animals. Ed Coles, secretary of Oregon Cattlemen's Association, Prineville. will attend the meet ing and discuss this problem. Oth er problems and activities of in terest to cattlemen will be acted upon. Election of officers for the com ing year will conclude the business session. speculates in stocks or bonds, the the Treasury too, according to of the speculative appeal tha politicians and other observers I Aubrev G. Lanston, dealer in Treasury tailored into the offer- make it sound like something il- governments and head of the firm lings. legal or just plain bad. that bears his name. He holds excessive speculation AU sorts of things are being HELPED SALES tends to be self-correcting and said about the people who recent ly speculated in government bonds and got their fingers burned. Now that margins have been boosted to SO per cent by the Fed speculation the Treasury would not have been able to sell the S26,5O0,000.OO0 of such securities that it sold during the 11 months ending last June." He cites several other govern ment offerings which, he says were successfully sold "because eral Reserve Board, there is talk! year and without a good dose of mat speculators have been send ing stock prices soaring to the detriment of the economy. Wall Street points out that little speculation can be done with margins at 70 per cent and prac tically none with them at 90 per cent, lde current market prac tically is on a cash basis, these experts assert. SPECULATION NECESSARY There still is speculation in the market definition of the word Suppose someone buys a nondivi- dend payer in the hope the price will appreciate and he can make a profit. That s one form of spec ulation as opposed to investment where one buys a stock for in come. Short selling also is classed as speculation. Both- these types of speculation are considered highly necessary (or a liquid market. The investor can find buyers for a stock he wants to sell. The speculator helps produce activity and keep the market in a narrow area. Without speculation, there might well be very wide changes in price between sales, it is pointed out. And those government bond speculators did a big service for Speaking of Treasury financing doesn't believe speculation will over the past 15 months, he says: enter the Treasury security mar "The Treasury invited specula-'kef as freely as it did before be tors to underwrite its offering of j cause of the heavy losses to spec securities with a term past oneiU!ators recently. t - - Chos. J. Cizek TAILOR Suits & Slocki Macto to Order Perfect Fit Guaranteed 119 SOUTH 7th 3 1 Tigard Voters Veto Move Again TIGARD fAPi For the second time in four months the voters of Tigard turned down a measure to incorporate their community into a legal town. The vote was 354 to 226 in Mon day's election. Both times the measure was sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce. 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