Minks are famed for their ravenous appetites,
their expensive pelts, their cannibalistic habit of devouring their
young when frightened. Last week in Astoria, Ore., William and Emil Urell, operators of a mink farm, appeared before a board of officers
from a nearby Coast Guard station, claimed the U. S. Coast Guard
owed them $6,750 for damages. Right after the whelping season, they
testified, a Coast Guard amphibian plane whizzed over their farm
within 150 feet of the ground. The mother minks, terror-stricken by
the drumming racket, dashed wildly about the cages, seized their 270
mink kittens, gobbled them up.
Attorneys for Messrs. Urell cited two previous
court decisions as basis for their claims. Astoria townfolk, who had
heard of damage awards granted in Washington and Alaska, were
confident that Messrs. Urell would win the argument when hearings
open this week.
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