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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1959)
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore Siindav, Dor. n. Iflfin PAGE 3 A HERB KENAGA Game Slides To Be Shown Herb Kenaga, formerly of Klam ath Kalis, the Ozarks and several Western slates, shoots his Alaskan big game with a 35 millimeter camera. He has collected trophies of just about every species in the Jar northern state. Kenaga will bring a carefully edited selection of his assortment of slides to the Odd Fellows Hal! In Merrill December 27, 28, and 29 beginning at 8 o'clock each night. Each night's showing will pro duce about 500 slides of big game, scenery and adventure. Each right's showing will be different, The shows will last more than two hours each. Kenaga will narrate For an hour preceding each, and during intermissions he will play Etercophonic music with his ex cellent equipment. Kenaga has spent about $7,000 or film and has amassed a li brary of some 25,000 slides. He has (raveled three or four hundred thousand miles tn all corners of Alaska and the Yukon, mostly by bush plane. A rifle cannot replace the cam era for sheer big game hunting thrills, he says. Kenaga has been living in Mer rill since April. But he wants to return to the NortI Country as coon as possible. . "There is plenty of country where you get the honest feeling you are the first man ever to have stood," he says. "It's a good feeling." His show is sponsored by the Merrill Odd Fellows Lodge as a fund-raising project. Educators Hold Conclave WEED Dr. M. J. Greenshields represented College of the Siski yous at an all day conference en titled "Relationships Between Chi co Stale College and Northern Cal ii'ornia Junior Colleges." The conference was held Thurs day, December 10, in Chico at the state college. Besides Dr. Green shields, representatives from other colleges are: L. Vernon Greenleaf, Lassen Junior College; J. J. Col lins, Yuba College; and Gilbert Collyer and Jackson Price, Shas ta College. The yearly conference, organized by Dr. Glen Kendall, president of Chico Stale College, allows the var ious institutions involved to dis cuss and solve mutual problems, Chances Good Railroads Won't Strike MRS. JIM (MARJORIE) CONROY, Malin, new president of the Klamath County Tuber culosis and Health Association has served on the association board for several years. Her husband is principal of Malin High School. She is the mother of two sons and is active in school and community projects. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Ongman, 2245 Radcliffe, this city. The bulletin board background was prepared by office person nel at the health department. Government To Buy Fowl WASHINGTON (AP) - Thei Agriculture Department will buy all stilbestrol-treated poultry from producers at prices based on mar ket levels before Dec. 10. That was the day Secretary of Welfare Arthur S. Flemming an nounced a voluntary withdrawal of these fowl from the market be cause stilbestrol had been found to cause cancer in test animals, and possibly in humans. Less than 1 per cent of the na tion's poultry have been treated with the hormone, and these are premium-priced birds called "caponettes." However, not all caponettes have had stilbestrol. The Agriculture Department was asked Friday what it would do with the poultry it purchased. A spokesman replied "we will decide that later. Our obligation right now is to protect producers." Officials said they had no idea how many treated fowl would be offered or what the total cost to the Agriculture Department would be. Acting Secretary of Agriculture True D. Morse said "capons should not be confused with capon ettes. Capons are surgically unsexed birds which have not been treated wilh stilbestrol. Ca ponettes were treated wilh it to give them similar characteris tics." Gas Truck Fire Noted CORVALLIS (AP) A truck loaded with 1,300 gallons of. gaso line caught fire and burned about one-half mile from downtown Cor- vallis Friday. For a time flames threatened to spread to several houses, but fire men beat them back and saved some of the gasoline. "We were just lucky it didn't blow up," said Corvallis Fire Chief Les Edmonson. The chief said a passing motor ist saw smoke coming from the rear of the truck and hailed it down on the city's outskirts. The driver, George Laubner, 56, of Albany, pulled off the road and as he did, the fire broke out. The truck was a total loss but no one was injured. The owner was Glen White, an Albany dis tributor. Laubner was driving to Philomath. Edmonson said gasoline leaking from the tank onto a muffler ap parently caused the blaze. Inspection Of Ship Set PARIS (UPI) A squad of French frogmen will inspect the hull of the cruiser U.S.S. Des Moines , when it docks at Toulon next Friday with President Eisen hower aboard. U. S. and French officials who are planning details of Eisenhow er s three-day stay here for Western summit meeting said the frogmen also will inspect the un derpinnings of the dock for secur ity an hour before the cruiser arrives. They outlined other details of the Eisenhower visit as follows The meeting of Eisenhower, President Charles de Gaulle, Brit ish Prime Minister Harold Mac millan and West German Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer is ex pected to last 2'4 days. The exact schedule has yet to be set, but it was expected they will meet Saturday mortiing and afternoon at the Elysee Palace. De Gaulle's Paris residence, with lunch there in between; Sunday morning and afternoon at Ram bouillct Castle, the presidential hunting lodge 30 miles southwest of Paris and again Monday at the Elysee. Albany Youth Killed By Car ALBANY. Ore. AP)-Twelve- year-old John Aas suffered fatal injuries Friday night when an au tomobile struck an unlighled bi cycle he was riding. The boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilman Aas of Albany, was re turning home from his newspaper route when he was struck by an automobile operated by Robert N Schrader of Albany. Schrader was not cited. The mishap occurred on a high way one mile north of the city limits. The boy was Oregon's 456th traf fic victim this year in the Asso ciated Press tabulation. Sixteen have perished this month. Democratic WASHINGTON' (AP) There's election next May. Close Race Seen By Labor Chief ST. PAIL, Minn. (AP) Oregon in the primary, he expects Morse Labor Commissioner Norman Nil-' h" close b,mnd Humphrey and en expects (hat Sen. Hubcil Kennedy. Humphrey iDMinni and Sen. I Nlls(,n is chairman of the John Kennedy ID-Mass) will pr0. Humphrey for President Commit dure a "neck and nock" race in I " Oregon. the Oregon primary a 50-50 chance a railroad contract settlement can be reached with out a strike, the nation's top rail labor official says. We are not looking for strike." said George E. Leighty Friday. "We're trying to settle this thing. If there is a strike it will be forced on us by the rail roads." Leighty is chairman of the Railway Labor Executives Assn. He said any railway work stop page would not be likely to come before May 1. Leighty said rail unions arc sending questionnaires to all rec ognized labor arbitrators who might be called on to serve on an emergency board named by the White House in the contract dispute. The questionnaires, he said, are designed to find out if potential arbitrators have been "brain washed" by what he called multimillion dollar . propaganda campaign by railroads on the featherbedding" issue. Railroads have charged there is rampant featherbedding enforced by the union. Featherbedding means requiring payment to em ployes for work not needed or in some cases for merely standing by doing nothing. Leighty said the questionnaires asked potential arbitrators if they believe rail workers are over paid; paid for work not per formed; whether stale laws re quire unneeded overloading of payrolls; whether railroads are in desperate financial straits. None of these things are true Leighty said. But because of nationwide advertising by the rail roads, he added, "seven out of 10 Americans mistakenly believe they are true." Nilsen is here to discuss the agenda of a governors' civil rights meeting to be held Jan. 14-15. He told newsmen that if Sen. Wayne Morse iD Orc) is entered Home Looted By 'Mourners' MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Posing as mourners, thieves looted the house of a dead man while his survivors attended his funeral Friday. Dressed in black, a man and woman forced the back door lock at the home of the late Arthur W Kneibler, former chairman of the Miami Housing Authority. They stole a bag containing $:10 change from an unlocked safe and took more than $500 worth of jewelry. Kneibler's son, Arthur, said the thieves apparently planned the break in after reading obituaries which listed the time of the serv ice. 'Rebel' Flag To Be Mended CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A Confederate flag, believed to be the first captured during the Civil War, will be laboriously recond tioned by the West Virginia His toncal Society. Kyle McCormick, director of the State Department of Archives and History, said the flag was cap tured at the Battle of Philippi June 3, 1861, and will be used in re-enactment of the battle. McCormick said the job, Under taken on recommendation of the Smithsonian Institution, will re quire about 200 hours of stitching. The Holland Tunnel between New York and Jersey City is used by more than 20 million vehicles a year. 12 8mm Action Movie Viewer - Leo's Camera Shop In The Village Court 836 Main 95 Sea Mishap Details Told PORTLAND (AP)-The Coast Guard commander on a. buoy tender that rammed a Japanese freighter at Astoria last week told an investigating board Thursday he saw the vessel on his radar screen. The Japanese ship, said Lt. Cmdr. William Gill, was just off the port bow, perhaps 1.500 yards away. He said he headed his own vessel a bit right and expected the other ship to pass to the left. An officer soon reported seeing the lights of the approaching ship through the fog, and Cmdr. Gill said he ordered right rudder to give it more room, to pass. Then, he said, he saw the three white lights on his starboard looming out of the fog, which showed the vessel had another in tow. He said he knew he would run It down if he continued on course. He ordered the engines reversed and had about stopped when the Jaoanese vessel appeared on the collision course. "I could think of nothing more that I could do," said Gill. "I was backing full. The Meiko Maru continued across our bow for sec onds. I was wondering why it didn't hit. Then at midship the vessels struck." Capt. T. Fujita, commander of the Meiko Maru. testified earlier at the hearing before Cmdr. W. L Morrison, that the collision came so suddenly alter he first saw the Mallow that it was im possible to avoid it. OSBORN HOTEL EUGENE, ORE. an. J. a. ifir im arir tt. TtetMfkly Meeem Now Is The Time To Shop LUCAS Furniture DECEMBER STOREWIDE SALE! SPECIAL SALE PRICES ON SECTIONALS 189" 3-PIECE SECTIONAL Foam rubber cushions and back. Comes in a durable tweed upholstery. Price reduced for this tale. ONLY 3- PIECE SECTIONAL Reversible foam rubber zipper cushions. Foam rubber back. Heavy frieze upholstery. SALE PRICE 4- PIECE SECTIONAL Similar construction to above set. 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