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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1960)
PAGE TWELVE HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON SUNDAY. MARCH 13, 1900 Question Once And For All, Pauline Davis SACRAMENTO (UPD Assem blywoman Pauline L. Davis, the woman chairman of the lower chamber Fish and Game Commit tee, has appointed a 20-member committee she hopes will solve the doe deer hunting situation for once and all. She said that the committee represented all interests and areas in the controversial subject. Most sources agree with her with one possible omission and it is a glaring one. She neglected to name any one from the agency involved the Fish and Game NEWARK. N.J. (UPII The number of men who wear toupees has doubled in the past 10 years, says a New Jersey wig maker, who's found they're not as sell-conscious about it as they used to be. "All kinds of people wear wigs," said Louis Lehncr of Cliflon, N.J "Jersey politicians as well as ac tors who want to impress the pub lic, and a truck driver who wants to look as young as he can, or some big-shot executive trying to duck company retirement policies." Women also wear hair pieces. Lohner confided just as many women as men, in fact. Lehner, a hefty 5 foot 7, Vien na born wigmaker, has turned out several thousand wigs and tou pees during his 12 years of doing business in Newark. The toupees cost anywhere from $75 for a small piece to $:t."iu for a full head of hair. Wigs lor the ladies or "transformations" as Lehner tactfully calls them gen erally cost from $200 to $350. A wig's average life is three year?. Hair for the wigs is cut from the head of fresh-cheeked peasant girls from small villages in the mountains of France and Italy, where the girls wear their hair long and preserve the necessary uniform color. Upon receiving the hair from ex porters, Lehner boils it for sterili zation. He has several hundred pounds of cut hair in 500 different colors and three different textures fine, medium and coarse. Lohner blends three or four hair colors lo achieve the desired color, since natural hair is made up of different shades. The next step is to examine a pre bald photograph of the custo mer. He tries on various wigs dur ing the first appointment in or der to select the one most becom ing. The next step is to place a pa per pattern of the wig on a wood en head and trace its outlines in heavy black pencil. Ribbon is placed on this tracing and silk lace is sewn on the ribbon to form the wig's foundation. An clastic band is fitted across the back. The wig foundation is fitted to the customer on his sec ond appoiutment. Finally, three girls, who have Von trained six months for this work, spend 30 to 40 hours insert ing several thousands hairs into the lace work with what is called a "ventilating" needle. The booths in Lehner's shop have separata exits so customers won't recognize each other during their visits. TEACHER c KVANSTON. III. (lTI-Johnny Iicvolta, who plays in a few choice tournaments these days, generally is regarded as one ot the out standing teachers of the game. Many outstanding men and wom en golfers often seek his advice when their game needs doctoring. To Settle Doe Department. As Walt Radke. sports colum nist for the San Francisco Exam iner, put it: ". , . the exclusion of any repre sentation by our Fish and Game Department, except as a provider of technical information when asked, seems a prime piece of comedy." Said Mrs. Davis: "The purpose of the advisory committee is to attempt to resolve some of the differences of opinion regarding California big game policies. "Although the Department of Lehner learned wig making in Vienna during a four-year appren ticeship. He came to the United States in 1H2.1. when few people in Austria could afford wigs, he said. What advice does Lehner have for those who wear wigs? Al though wigs cannot be distin guished from the real thing ex cept by a practiced eye, he said, it is still not ? good idea to keep ,l toupee secret from a spouse. He or she is bound to find out. Fish and Game is not a part of the advisory group, one of their representatives will be in attend ance to provide technical informa tional services only." But officials of the agency said no word had yet been received from Mrs. Davis asking that a member of the department be present at all meetings. And oth er sources said that none is forth coming. The advisory committee will meet at its discretion and report its opinions and recommendations to the interim committee on fish and game before the 1001 general session of the state Legislature. Members of the committee won't be paid for doing the job and Mrs. Davis said that the members won't have "interference or instructions from the Assembly interim com mittee" on Fish and Game. There will be no chairman of the committee but a representa tive of the Legislative Counsel's office will be an "impartial mod erator" at the meetings. Mrs. Davis, a Portola Demo crat, said that during field trips of her committee "it became quite evident that there is diversified opinion among sportsmen's groups, the Department of Fish and Game and other agencies. "This advisory group is an ef fort to bring all these groups to gether on common meeting ground to try to work out a solution. She first appointed 19 members of the committee but later, for political reasons, decided to add a 20th member, Joe Shannon, of the Dunsmuir Rod and Gun Club at Dunsmuir. tile is not related to Walter T. Shannon, director of the F&G Department.) The original resolution asking for a citizens advisory committee to study the either-sex hunting problem came from Assemblyman John C. Williamson, a Bakersfield Democrat. He made his move at a January 13 meeting of the F&G commit tee and it was approved by the committee without a single "no" vote. Under the resolution adopted by the committee, Mrs. Davis was in structed to make appointments "that will provide a representa tive cross-section of sportsmen's groups and of state and federal agencies having a mutual interest in the management of California deer herds." Williamson at that time de scribed the policy on either-sex hunts as "black or white." He meant that an individual sports- Without Aid man is either for It or against it. There is no middle-of-the-road. Williamson was asked if he thought the citizens group would be able to get unified behind the question. He replied that "I think we can get a majority." California's Fish and Game Com mission and Department has been moving slowly toward more either sex hunts in the state. When Shan non took office he told UPI he would push for more such hunts on the grounds that they were sound game management. Later, at the F&G committee session, Shannon promised not to "shove antlerless hunts down peo ple's throats" but pointed out that the great majority of Western states now have such hunts. Ford Trucks Last Longer n rii FARM S your Farm Truck Headquarter BALSIGER MOTOR CO. M.i. ai !. Ph. TU 4-112.1 mn mm kbiuizer AT SIMPLOT SOILBUILDERS The Only Bulk Fertilizer Distributor In The Basin Area! WE'RE WORKING TO KEEP YOUR FERTILIZER COSTS DOWN .... ... and it's the easy way to fertilize! No back breaking sacks to handle . . . No sacks to dispose of. Just back the spreader up to the truck and open the gates! WE FURNISH THE BULK BINS FREE OF CHARGE! 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