Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 13, 1959, Page 3, Image 3

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    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. Choose from
various fabrics and colors. , SALE PRICE
324"
389"
WE HAVE THE BIGGEST ASSORTMENT OF SECTIONALS
IN TOWN ... ALL REDUCED FOR THIS EVENT!
EVERYTHING IN THE STORE REDUCED IN PRICE
Except a Few Factory Controlled Itemt
BUY WITH ASSURANCE OF COMPLETE SATISFACTION
We'va Been Furnishing Klomath Fold Homei for 39 Years
No Money Down
On Approved
Credit
Up to 3 Years To Pay
LUCAS FURNITURE
195 E. Main
"Our Location Saves You Money" Ph. TU 4-3134
LIGHT DISPLAYS
The Aurora Australis and the
Aurora Borealis are displays of
lifiht in the high levels of the
earth's atmosphere. They are most
Irequcntly seen in broad belts
which lie approximately along the
boundaries of the polar regions.
Shop Here For A Complete
Selection Of
MEN'S TOILETRY SETS
CURRIN'S DRUGS
In The Village Court
840 Main
World'. Only
Hilly Automatic Cf
EI.ECTROLUX9
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Ph. 4-7167 2SS0 White St.
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