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REQUESTS TO
"FORBID 'DUMP
UHBER STUDY
The county plfcflnutj com
mission last nifhfj 4c under
j : V a -i
aavi&emeni regur uiat 11
recommend couty onmg
ordinances to Brohibit the
Cit Sanitary Service from
operating a gKpo4 4ump
south of Jaf kscnviH.
At a special lttiiag Ia the
courthoug? auditorium,' gen
erally ordqgly btft Qrmetimes
excited crowd 0 mere than
130 person, herl attorneys
and othr interiUd argue
the pros and cotf iha pro
posed site.
fiiuy anitary ttie plans
to begin dumpinf th site
bordering Jacksonville on
Aug. 1 regardlm ,i bjee
tions, Anthony Boittna, kcd
of the firm, inflict last
week. HowtvO, Attorney
Stanly Jones, representing
, the comrgny, indicated that
it would be willing to post
pone use of the sit "for a rea
sonable length of time."
Uses Large Maj
Jack Eaton, planning tech
nician, using large map of
the area poimed out the exact
location , of tfte" 360 acres
which the company has pur
chased as 4 proposed dump
site. The land borders the
Jacksqgille city limits en the
southeast corner, fnd parti
ally fan the south sid.
Eaton reported thft from
the standpoint f 'good plan
ning "the proposed location
Redmond,Flier
Crashes; Helps ,
Extinguish Blaze
Redmond, Ore. (UPD A
Redmond lumberman crash
landed his Cessna 180 plane
in the treetops of young hem
locks, slid down one' of the
trees as the plane burst into
flames, then dashed to his
summer home a quarter of a
mile away, summoned aid and
came back to help put out a
potential forest fire Wednes
day evening. 1
Plana Stalls
Phil Dahl, operator of the
Tite Knot Pine mill, Red
mond, was coming in for a
landing on his private airstrip
at his summer home in the
Metolius river area when the
plane stalled and crashed into
the threetops. Dahl was cut
and bruised as he slid down
the tree, but lost no time in
summoning help.
Meanwhile, Carl De Moye,
Black Butte lookout, and
Howard Anderson, on Cache
Mountain, reported the heavy
Gclouds of smoke. Mervin
Wolfe, MetoMus District Ran
ger, and Lee Morton headed
a crew of firefighters who
Omoved quickly and halted the
blaze before it had spread
. more than 40 feet.
The plane was destroyed.
Local Youth Awarded
Damages by Jury
-. A circuit court jury return
ed? a verdict in favor of Clif
ford Eckel, 47, Wednesday af
ternoon in a trial on an as
sault and battery complaint
filed "by the guardian of the
plaintiff, Paul O. Eckel,
Hapf$r Valley rd., Medford.
The complifit vas filed
against John i. Breeze, Med
ford. Eckel was tvPt $1,000
O general gamaget an $4,000
O punitive damages.
Attorney for tha plaintiff
was Bernard Kelly -with O.
H. Bengston attorney for the
defendant.
Search o? Atlantic for. Mouse Sent
AJoft in Thor Missile Unsuccessful
Cape Canaveral, Fla. (UPD
Air Force planes and Navy
O recovery boats reported no
success today in the South At-
" lantic search for Wickie the
spacQmouse. Te Air Force
said the hutit is ''still going
on."
' Wickie, blasted into space
at 2:13 p.m. (PT) Wednes
day in the nose cone of a
Thor-fcble missile, was the
. second rodent t be shot
through space in a combina
tion military-scientific test.
Flcfching Rd Light
Tije ecovery package of
the Thr-A.ble noSfe con con
tfcned g radio1 transmitter
outfitted with a flashing red
lfc&P ?id constant white
ut if they functioned
Is in extremely poor taste.
Garbage disposal is consid
ered heavy industry and as
such should be located in an
industrial area."
East of Medford practically
all the usable subdivision land
has been used up, Eaton not
ed, and in the -next five to
ten years a large residential
growth between Medford and
Jacksonville is anticipated.
With that growth, he project
ed, the logical place to build
would be in areas suqh as
the proposed dump site.
Use Fill Method
In response to questioning,
Jones stated that the service
plans to use the sanitary fill
method of disposal, and that
bo burning is anticipated at
this time." The latter state
ment was met with overtones
of distrust from the audience
and later in the hearing Wal
ter Nunley, representing a
number of families in the
area, said that "inherent in
the statement is if the City
Sanitary Service feels it nec
essary at a later date, it will
burn."
With further probing from
Commissioner John Nieder
meyer it was brought out that
the sanitary fill method re
quires covering refuse dailyi
Jones agreed to this defini
tion and said that "techni
cally speaking the service
would use the fill method.
Thisindfcated a plan to fill
at regular intervals but not
daily. ,
At one point during the
hearing Jones answered "I be
lieve .there are a number of
people who have objections"
to the site .location. Laughter
and clapping boiled from the
strongly anti-dump site crowd
but order was quickly re
stored by Commission Chair
man Edwin Gebhard.
Presents City's Case
Jacksonville City Attorney
Ervin Hogan" presented the
city's case against the pro
posed site but admitted that
he had not come up with any
laws that have been broken.
With strong backing from
the mayor and city council
men, Hogan pointed out that
the dump would inhibit nor
mal growth of the city and its
location so close to the city
would possibly constitute a
nuisance. He also said that
the city has been planning for
two years to build a second
reservoir on land directly ad
jacent to the proposed site.
Hogan summed up: "Our
position is that there is no
way it (the dump) can be justi
fied from the standpoint of
good planning."
Water Contamination
Questions concerning possi
ble water and air polution
and contamination from ro
dents were also discussed.
Nunley told the commission
that he represented 64 fam
ilies whose property holdings
in the area were evaluated
at v$834,000. He said these
people "honestly believe that
proposed dump, if operated,
would have an adverse effect
on the value of their prop
erty." Both Hogan and Nunley
told the commission that if
their plea was ineffective
they would have to seek an
other forum.
The commission set a sec
ond special meeting for Wed
nesday, July 30, at which
time they said they will for
mulate a recommendation to
the county court.
Attorneys for both sides
agreed " to prepare written
briefs,-setting forth their argu
ments, for the next meeting..
properly the search force was
unable to detect them.
The hunt was being center
ed about halfway between
Ascension Island and the coast
of Africa.
It appeared the best guide
the searchers had today, if it
worked, was the medicineman
size balloon designed to sus
pend the nose cone and its
little passenger just beneath
the surface of the water.
"The, search for the nose
cone of the Thor-Able reentry
test vehicle launched last eve
ning is still going on," the
Air Force said in the first
statement since the rocket
was launched.
But the odds favored
Wickie's survival on the 6,300-
52nd Year
Medford
26 PAGES
-For Greener Pastures
(Herblock Is on
Porter Introduces
Bill to Increase
Size of Monument
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Mail Tribune Correspondent
Washington Legislation
authorizing a five-fold in
crease in the size of Oregon
Caves National Monument
southwest of Medford was in
troduced in the House today
by Rep. Charles O. Porter (D
Ore.). ' ' '
In a speech prepared for de
livery to the House, Congress
man Porter said the expan
sion of the scenic area run by
the National Park Service
would be a prelude to im
provement of facilities for at
tracting more tourists.
"The experts in the Park
Service are agreed that the
expansion recommended in
my bill will help to increase
the tourist traffic to the mon
ument by providing space for
much needed development of
visitor facilities," said Porter.
Plans Improvements
The Park Service, he said,
informed him that it plans to
Chrome Miners Set
Meeting in CJ
' Cave Junction A meeting
of chrome miners and those
interested in chrome mining
will be held at the American
Legion hall in Cave Junction
at 2 p.m. Saturday, July 26.
Medford Attorney Bruce
Manley, president of the California-Oregon
Chrome Pro
ducers association, will re
port on his trip to Washing
ton, D.C., where he wprked
for six weeks on the chrome
stockpiling program.
Representative Claire Engle
of California introduced a bill
in the house for a chrome pro
gram calling for stockpiling
50,000 tons of ferrochrome in
a six-year period, and the
establishment of a ferro
chrome processing plant to
handle all locally produced
chrome ores.
J. W. Pressler, Grants Pass,
secretary of the association,
urged all interested citizens
to attend the meeting.
Albacore Tuna
Catches Said Good
Astoria (UPD Grind ratrhes
of albacore tuna off the Ore
gon coast continued to be re
ported , today as two boats
docked here with 5Vi tons
apiece. . .
mile trip through the hazards
of the unknown outside the
earth's atmosphere.
A spokesman disclosed Wed
nesday that Wickie's predeces
sor, another albino female
named Laska, lived for 32
minutes after she was blasted
into the heavens.
Chute Thought Failure
This is the period required
for the return of the Thor
Able nose cone to the earth's
surface in a 6,300-mile jour
ney. It was believed the last
recovery effort failed either
because the nose cone's para
chute did not open or the
balloon designed to suspend
the package just below the
water failed to inflate.
Vacation)
spend nearly $190,000 on im
provements, some of them
contingent on whether Con
gress passes the bill.
The idea of expanding the
area from 480 acres to 2,910
acres is not new. The Park
Service has desired the ex
pansion for some years. In
1951, the service obtained an
agreement from the U. S.
Forest Service about the pro
posed expansion. All of the ad
ditional acreage to be added
to the monument would be
carved out of Siskiyou Nation
al Forest, which surrounds the
monument grounds just north
of the Oregon-California bor
der in Josephine County. But
no one has pushed the idea in
recent years. ;. .. .. ..
Enlargement would provide
Oregon Caves monument with
a suitable water supply, add
essential forested mountainous
areas, include significant geo
logical and biological fea
tures and allow construction
and development of much
needed visitor facilities, Por
ter explained.
Natural Contours
- The boundaries of the ex
panded area would follow,, for
the most part, the natural con.
tours of the surrounding
ridges, instead of being
straight and giving the monu
ment grounds its present rec
tangular shape. It would be
about three miles across, com
pared to one mile wide now.
"At one time there were
some objections from cattle
men in the area," said Porter.
"However, these objections
have been met by a provision
in the agreement between the
Forest Service and the Park
Serviceito allow lifetime graz
ing rights for cattlemen now
grazing national forest lands
that would become part of
the monument area."
Porter said his bill contains
requested provisions relating
to distribution of receipts
from any O and C timber cut
and' sold from the expanded
area. This was requested by
the Association of O'and C
Counties back in 1952 when
the idea, was fresh.
Improve Roads
The Park Service informed
Porter that it planned to spend
$69,800 in improving roads
and trails and parking areas
and $119,700 on buildings and
utilities for visitors and em
ployees. This would be done
under the 10-year park im
provement program called
Mission 66.
Number of visitors to Ore
gon Caves has fluctuated
greatly in the past decade.
Last year it was 71,260. But
in 1947 it was 86,003, which
was higher than any year
since. The lowest number was
60,638 two years ago.
.The national monument was
established in 1909 and is
under the supervision of the
superintendent of Crater Lake
National Park. . '
Porter said he has hopes of
getting his bill enacted before
adjournment. He said he
knows of no opposition to it.
Johns Manville Plant .
At KF Nearly Ready
) Klamath Falls (UPD The
Johns Manville acoustical
board plant here will go into
full operation later this sum
mer, W. H. Graham, local
manager, said today.
MEDFORD, OREGON,
Troubieshoofer in
Lebanon Appears
Making Headway
Troop Departure
Matter of Time
Beirut, Lebanon (UPD The
opposition appeared today to
be warming up to the trouble
shooting mission of U. S. Dep
uty Under-secretary of State
Robert Murphy. An end to
the crisis and the withdrawal
of American troops seemed
only a matter of time.
Tension eased sharply Wed
nesday when Speaker Adel
Osseiran of the 66-man Leb
anese Parliament announced
it would meet July 31 to elect
a successor to controversial
President Camille Chamoun.
The session originally had
been scheduled for today.
Talks With Leaders
Murphy has talked with
leaders of both sides in an ef
fort to help find a suitable
compromise candidate and his
efforts drew praise today
from the opposition newspa
per Telegraph which predict
ed confidently the U. S. forc
es will "go back where they
came from" soon. . " ,
It said Murphy, through
talks with opposition leaders,
now knows the facts about
the situation in Lebanon. We
have learned that the infor
mation collected by Murphy
will lead to a relaxation of
the crisis within the next few
day's." ' n .
Compromise Seen
The pro-government paper
Albina also reported the pos
sibility of a compromise aris
ing from Murphy's talks but
expressed government feel
ings against such a move al
though the government de
cision to seek a presidential
Candida te-utside-' Parliament
represented' a major compro
mise. The independents newspa
per Nahar said Murphy is
making progress because he
had President Eisenhower's
full authority, to engage in
talks. '
The feeling here was that
every day is vital in seeking
a solution. No one knows how
long the extremist opposition
elements will continue to ac
cept U. S. troops and fleet
activities without provoking
a real incident.
Two Boys Reported
Molested Near Park
Two boys, 6 and 7, were
molested yesterday by an old
er boy who enticed them from
Hawthorne park down to Bear
creek, city police reported.
This is the first case of its
kind this year, police said to
day. Several cases of indecent
exposure have been reported
but these were said to be a
yearly occurrence.
Asked if he thought the
danger to children from such
cases had reached serious pro
portions, Charles P. Champ
lin, chief of police, said: "Ac
tually it hasn't.
"But we consider any inci
dent of that nature serious,"
he added. Champlin said the
area was visited regularly by
patrol cars, and "probably we
will have the man inspecting
meters in that area patrol on
foot."
Champlin urged parents to
instruct- their children to
avoid contact with strangers.
"Parents hesitate about re
porting such cases because
they feel embarrassed," , he
said. But he encouraged them
to report every incident to
police as quickly as possible.
Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE,
Washington -.1 3 1
Cleveland .. 6 9 0
Griggs, Valentineiti (3).
Constable (8) and Fitz
gerald; Bell and Nixon.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Los Angeles 3 ,6 "2
Pittsburgh .-5 9 1
Williams. Klipetein (4),
Kipp (5). Labine (7) and
Roseboro. Pignatano (7);
Wilt, Gross (6). Face (9)
and Hall.
'St. Louis 4 10 0
Milwaukee ... 0 -4 1
Jones- (8-7) and Smith;
Spahn, Rush (1), Robinson
(6), Conley (7) and Crandall.
THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1958
HAROLD MACMILLAN PRESIDENT EISENHOWER NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV
Summit Conference in United Nations Framework Goal of These. Men
HJftS Working on Security,
Protocol (Problems for Talk
United Nations, N. Y. (UPD
The United Nations has be
gun working on security and
protocol problems connected
with a summit conference in
the Security Council, and it
was reported U.S. Marines
may be asked to guard a 15
block approach to the build
ing. '
Ready by Monday
A source close to Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold
said the United Nations would
be ready by Monday to play
host to President Eisenhower,
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush
chev, and other government
chiefs invited to attend.
But some sources doubted
security arrangements could
be completed in time. It was
expected that anti-Communist
organizations in New York,
particularly remnants of the
Hungarian freedom army who
escaped the 1956 Soviet tank
attacks,) would give the Soviet
delegation a sizzling reception
when it arrived. -
U..N. Security officials said
they were ready to cooperate
with the U. S. Secret Service,
Britain's Scotland Yard, " the
House Files Reply
In Danielson Case
Richard House. Medford,
through his attorney, Stanley
C. Jones, today filed a reply
to an answer filed recently
with the court clerk in the
action to contest nomination
of Robert G. Danielson.
House, in his reply, denied
that the court did not have
jurisdiction to render a valid
judgment in the case as stated
in the answer.
House, in a petition filed
earlier this month, contested
the election of Danielson as
district judge in the primary
election May 16.
He stated that Danielson
had withdrawn as a candidate
prior to the election, and was
not an eligible candidate for
nomination.
In his reply House, asks for
judgment as asked for in the
complaint and that it be de
termined , by the court that
Danielson was not nominated
and that E. Roy Bashaw was
duly nominated as the candi
date receiving next to the
highest number of votes.
Deveopmenf Banned
In Upper McKenzie
1 1 Portland (UPD The Oregon
Water Resources Board said
today it had banned the up
per reaches of the McKenzie
river and Clear lake to hdro
electric development.
Jurisdiction of Assigning Summer Home Sites at'
Howard Prairie Up to Bureau of Land Management
County Court Judge Rod
ney Keating returned Wednes
day evening after attending a
meeting in Portland with the
representatives of the national
park service and the bureau
of reclamation and the Inter
state association of public land
committees at Glacier Na
tional Park, Mont.
While in Portland Judge
Keating confirmed with the
park - service and bureau of
reclamation representatives on
questions regarding the ad
ministration of recreation fa
cilities in the Talent project.
Keating said jurisdiction of
assigning summer home sites
the Howard Prairie dam
area will be entirely up to the
bureau of land management.
Price 10 Cents
1RIBUNE
French Surete and Russia's se
curity organization.
Khrushchev's sudden pro
vissional acceptance of Eisen
hower's bid to a summit meet
ing in the Security Council
immediately touched off re
ports that a 15-block stretch
of Manhattan's First ave. may
be closed off and policed by
U. S. Marines. The glistening
U.N. office edifice fronts on
First ave., while the East river
flows behind it.
Soviet Ambassador Arkady
A. Cobolev, who Wednesday
night delivered to Hammar
skjold Khrushchev's "request"
for a Monday meeting of the
council, said he had no qualms
about putting up the t Soviet
premier in his embassy in the
heart of New York's Park
Avenue, or' at a suburban
Supreme Court
Gets Nunn Case
Salem (UPD An action to
restrain Gov. Robert D.
Holmes from commuting the
death sentence of Billy Junior
Nunn to life imprisonment
was filed with the State Su
preme Court here Wednes
day. Filing the suit were Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Eacret, Klam
ath Falls, father of 14-year-old
Alvin Eacret who was
killed two years ago. Nunn
was convicted of first degree
murder in, Jackson county.
The suit originally was filed
in the Jackson couty Circuit
Court and later transferred to
Marion county Circuit Court.
The Marion county Circuit
Court held that the governor
was vested with the authority
to commute sentences.
Court officials said today
they had no idea when the ap
peal to the Supreme Court
would be heard.
Gov. Holmes, who is op
posed to .capital punishment,
already has commuted two
death sentences while "in of
fice. New Post Office
Sets Open House
Shady Cove. The new
Shady Cove post office on
Highway 62 near the Shady
Cove clinic will hold an open
house between 10 a.m.' and 2
p.m. Saturday, July 26.
The -post office has been
open about two months, but
open house was delayed pend
ing completion of installation
of new equipment, the post
master said.
The postmaster invited res
idents of the area to visit the
new building Saturday.
He added that the area had
only been designated for home
sites at the head of the lake
and haft not been surveyed at
this time. He mentioned that
the area near the dam would
be first developed for summer
homes with the area on the
north side of the lake above
the dam not being developed
for several years.
Organizational sites, the
judge said, will be given to
organizations as "use permits"
only with a time limit. He ex
plained that it is not antici
pated that these sites will be
permanent as at Lake of the
Woods.
Representatives from both
the park service and bureau
of reclamation will meet with
No. 107
place the delegation owns at
Glen Cove, Long Island, 25
miles from the city.
He said, however, that
Khrushchev might decide to
stay at a New York hotel.
Violent Electric
Storm Batters
DunsmuirArea
. Klamath Falls (UPD A vio
lent electric storm, accom
panied by hail and heavy
rain, caused extensive dam
age in the Weed, Dunsmuir,
Castella and Gazelle areas of
Northern California and sev
eral power , outages in the
Klamath Falls area .Wednes
day night and early today.
Grain Crop Destroyed -
The over-sized hail destroy
ed the entire grain crop in
the . Gazelle ;area, according
to the Mt.. Shasta, Calif.,
weather bureau. Rain start
ing about 7:30 p.m. Wednes
day measured 2Vi inches in
an hour and water was re
ported standing up to six in
ches deep in some fields this
morning. Highway 99 was
temporarily closed to traf
fic during . the night because
of the storm.
Lightning caused several
fires in Weed. One strike was
at the Weed Safeway store,
where an electric motor in a
frozen food locker burned
out, causing severe smoke
damage to the store.
Crewi Called Out
Crews from the California
Oregon Power Company and
Pacific Telephone and Tele
graph Company worked
through the night to restore
service. Copco reported sev
eral transformer strikes, with
power out all night on High
way 99 south of Weed. Floyd
Dill, i P. T. & T. manager at
Yreka, said 200 phone sub
scribers were still without
service this morning. Three
phone cables were damaged
by lightning. A crew was
rushed from Redding, Calif.,
to' help restore the service. .
Five Explosions Rock
City in Illinois
Bellville, 111. (UPD - Five
explosions rocked the near
center of this city about noon
today, resulting in the evacu
ation of thousands of persons
from their homes in an area
two miles long and one-half
mile wide.
Corvallis (UPD George L.
White, 46, Philomath, was
killed Wednesday in a logging
accident near Eddyville.
the Jackson county court
Wednesday afternoon in Med
ford it was reported.
At the meeting held at Gla
cier Monday and Tuesday
Judge Keating was one of two
delegates from the Oregon as
sociation. The other delegate,
County Court Judge Charles
H. Mack of Klamath county,
was elected vice president of
the association.
Items discussed at the meet
ing included general discus
sion by each state of its own
problems as to public lands
and related problems.
The local delegate mention
ed the real estate promoter
problems experienced in sev
eral of the member states
where large areas of land are
Decision Catches
French Officials
By Surprise
Meeting Must
Be Kept Short
Washington f(JPD Presi
dent Eisenhower today com-
pleted a note to Nikiia S.
Khrushchev which yit
said to demand that the
Soviet Premier spell out e&
aclly what he wants to dis
cuss at the proposed United
Nations summit meeting.
Washington (UPD French
Premier Charles De Gaulle
in an about-face today agreed
to attend a summit meeting
in New York if it is kept
short.
The general's decision, an
nounced in Paris, surprised
even French officials who
thought he would refuse to
participate in a Middle East
conference if it were held in
the publicity glare of the
United Nations.
New Note Prepared
De Gaulle's decision was
disclosed as President Eisen
hower and Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles were draft
ing a proposed new note to
Soviet Premier Nikta S.
Khrushchev on date, place
and program for the meeting.
There was no hint as to
the contents of the U.S. note,
but White House Press Secre
tary James C. Hagerty said it
would not be sent to Moscow
until it had been looked over
by Britain and France.
Ever since the subject of a
summit meeting in the Se
curity Council was broached
this week, Paris has been re
porting that De Gaulle ob
jected strenuously to holding
the conference in New York.
French authorities said he pre
ferred a more neutral place,
such as Geneva, and a meet
ing without publicity. U.N.
Security Council meetings
usually are televised.
It appeared that De Gaulle's
decision removed one of the
possible obstacles to a sum
mit meeting soon on the Mid
dle East crisis. 1
. . Still to ..be resolved were
issues of time, representation,
and ground rules. .
Next Monday Appears Out
It was clear, however, that
the meeting time proposed by
Khrushchev next Monday .
was out. i '
Dulles will be in Europe
over the week end and will
not "return to this country
until Tuesday morning. He
has dates that day , and the
next with Italian, Premier
AmnKore Fanfani.
Tha White House gave no
indication of the official U.S.
attitude toward Khrushchev's
demand that Indian Prime
Minister Jawaharlal Nehru
and chiefs of the Arab states
be invited to the. meeting.
Portland Woman
Dies in Home Fire
Portland (UPD Mn. An'
Ambrose, 70, a cripple, did
today in a fire at the bedroom
of her home here.
Reno, Nev. (UPD Planes
from the Civil Air Patrol and
the Sixth Air Force are
searching for a small Army
plane missing on a flight from
Bishop, Calif., to Winnemuc
ca, Nev.
WEATHER
FORECAST: Afternoon and eve
nine thunderstorms over Cas
cades and Siskiyous; otherwise
fair throuffh Friday. Low to
night 60. High Friday 95.
Temp.
Highest Yesterday ; ,,, 93
Lowest this Morning ' 62
Our Skies Tonigrit0
Sunset today 7:40 p.m.
Sunrise tomorrow 4:56 a.m.
Moonset tomorrow 12:29 a.m.
Full Moon Juiy30
Mercury, the planet nearest
to the Sun, might be dfmy
seen tonight in the early eve
ning twilight. It is moving nrf
the star, Regulus, and is a. kit
brighter than the latter. 1
being sold for subdivision.
One example cited was where
desert land without water was
being sold from $39 to $100
per acre. Keating said that the
majority of the states, to com
bat this problem, are adopting
as fast as possible subdivision
ordinances to prfteet both the '
present land owners and 'resi
dents. ..Also discussed were various
bills before the Senate per
taining to public domain
lands.
Judge Keating ' served as
chairman of the buiget com
mittee during the meeting.
Also attending from Oregon
were delegates from the coun
ty , courts in Tillamook and
Lake counties.