Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 21, 1951, Page 1, Image 1

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    U.S.
PDoime, IFored mi
4iiiii. Itullooii
I'arnile Saliirilav
Injlic..'......,.,!.,..,.,.,!
-'-. S'-i-: t ,, ; i : 7-; v '
lr FRANK JKNK1NN
President Truman How uu from
Florida yesterday lo make polit
ical speech Hi Washington last
muhl in Uie course ol which bo
salcl
"1 vrnture to predict that there
In itolng to bn more money aprnl
Hi trying to defeat the Democrats
party next year than hen ever
beiore been pent In any election
in me history ol the republic.
It could be. These are daya of
Man, wide and handsome spend
Inn. It la my personal sues, how
ever, that If the Republicans arjend
TOO MUCH as Our Harry aaya
they art going to, II will boomer
ana on them.
I don't know how you feel about
It, but when I aee aomebodv aoend-
Ina too much money to gel elected
to ollire my Inclination la to vote
against nun rawer than for mm.
I think it will work Uial way In
nesi year a election.
Incidentally, Harry trio VP
from Florida and return coal the
taxpayera somewhere around I3M0
I ve forgotten the exact amount,
nut it waa figured up by some
congressman in Washington yes
lerday.) :,.. -.. .. . ,
T He rami lib IB hla neraanal
lan which costs around too an
Itmir to operate and Uie trip up
and sack toot nulla aeveral houra.
H'a luat possible, you are, that he
spent more taxpayer money to
make his last night's speech than
ANY PRESIDENT In the history
or ine republic ever spent lor
similar purpose.
From Washington:
"Announced battle casualties In
Korea reached 100,171 today. The
defense department's weekly sum
miry, reporting an Increase of DM
last week, sent the totsl over the
loo.ooo mark , . .
"In 16 months ot fighting In
Korea. American combat lossVs
have lar exceeded the 80.000 sul
lercd from Pearl Harbor Day lo
l he end of 143 In World War II.
'I he tola! for that year, which saw
hitter fighting In the Southwest
Pacific, In North Africa and
oiher spots around the world, wss
only ni.wu. '
Korea Is a 'notice action" on a
rather staggering scale. Isn't It?
More from Washington:
"General lloyt Vandenberg said
lodav the allies' complete air su
periority over Korea Is now being
seriously cliullcngcd by the MIOs,
but so far Uie situation Is In hand.
"The air force chief of staff
Vandonbergl told long and grim
news conference that possible seri
ous potentials exist. Among these,
he tinted I he fact that OVER.
NfOHT CHINA HAS BECOME
ONE OF THE MAJOR AIR
TOWERS OF THE WORLD,
l ie then sdded:
"Under the ground rules rstah.
VMied at the outset of the Korean
war, It la impossible for us to
giiin air supremscy because for
reiuioiia that we all understand we
have fallowed a policy of not at
tacking the strongholds of enemy
sir power directly across the Ynlu
river In Manchuria."
You'd belter look a little out,
general, A famous five-star com
mander was called home In dls-
(Conllnned on Fag 4.1
iDON PHELPS, 2129 Ebcr
Join, may have been antlci
, ))ntlng tomorrow's holiday
nhnn lha no m a a m n n
( ivi.vaa. tiiv v n iii v i a in a ji
snapped him this morning
as Phelps was en route to
his v?ork at Rcnie Jewelers.
';LrL-
Pelican Pele
Christmas Windows To Be
Unveiled Tonight; Huge
Parade Slated Saturday
Tomorrow may be Thanksgiving
but lor Klamath folks there will
be a preview of Christmas tonight
with the unveiling of Christmas
windows in downtown districts.
Official Christines season,
though, won't gel underway until
Saturday morning when Main
street will see perhaps the great
est of all Klamath Christmas pa
rades ever presented.
Mora than 10 giant balloons and
novelties aa high as IS feet and
ss long as as will be featured in
Battle Loss
Figure Hits
100,000
- WArlHlNQTOrf. fW Announced
DA battle casualties In Korea
reached 100,176 today.
The defense departments weekly
ummsry. reporting an Increase of
940 since Issi week, sent the total
over tile 100,000 mark. By com
parison, VM. combat casualties In
the first year of tills country s
participation In world war two were
M.OOO.
Of the 6(0 new battle casualties
reported today. 150 were killed
outright In sotlon: 763 were
wounded, and 36 are missing
Following Is a summsry of the
reports, covering casualties whose
families received notification
through lssi Friday:
Last In- New
Week crease Total
Killed
In Action ..... 15.001
Wounded 71.642
Missing 12.583
Total MJ26
Battle
Deaths (X) 16.606
Current
150 15.192
"JOT 73.404
SS 13.830
t&O 100,176
167 Itill
Missing Y . .10.6.16 .15 10.171
X) Includes killed In aotion.
1,636 fatally wounded and 164 dead,
originally reported missing.
(Y) After deducting from gross
totsl 1.391 returned, 174 known cap
lured and 164 known dead.
Following Is a breakdown of the
casualties by services:
Last In- New
Week crease Totsl
Army ... 81,160 836 81.9W
Navy 1.139 It 1.143
Air force 910 6 916
Murine corps ... 16.027 95 16.122
American families have been told
of some. 22.000 casusltles among
their men since Oen, Matthew B.
Rldgwey first offered to talk about
an armistice on June 30.
About seven out of every ten
American battle losses have been
suffered since the Chinese Reds
poured across the Manchurlan bor
der Into the then virtually-won
Korean battlefield a mile more
than one year ago.
The 70,000 VB. casualties re
ported since the .Chinese entered
the war Includes nearly 8,000 of the
12,500 American listed at one time
or another as missing In aotion.
This missing figure has been re
duced to a current torsi ot around
10,800, Among these are the some
6,500 Americans reported by Col.
Jamas M. Hanley, chief of the wsr
orlmes section of the U.S. "in army
In Korea,- to have been killed by
their captors. General Ridgcway
has without using figures authen
ticated Hanley's report. But the
general asid the deaths nave been
reported to the. families concerned.
KF Business
To Shut Down
Klamath's business district will
be Quiet tomorrow as merchants
and businessmen observe the
Thanksgiving holiday.
Most all stores but a few inde
pendent groceries will remain
closed tomorrow, along with banks,
postofflce, city hall, liquor store,
courthouse, and city and county
schools, which will be closed Fri
day also.
The Herald and News will pub
lish a rogular edition Thanksgiv
ing day. However, all Herald and
New offices will close at 1 cm.
the parade, along with Mr. and
Mis. nanta cisus. Merry cnrtsl
n:i( the KUHS marching band
and other music groups.
Main street decoration-hanglng
has almost been completed, but
City Engineer E. A. (Taxi! Thom
as says Uie city street department
doing the work. Is having trouble
hanging the decorations on aide
streets.
The engineer hss asked that no
cars be perked on 6th, 7th. 8th
end 9th between Pine and Klam
ath streets alter midnight for the
next three nlghla so the work will
be facilitated.
Beginning November 30 and con
tinuing each Friday until Christ
mas, stores will remain open un
til 9 p.m. for the convenience of
Christmas shoppers.
The balloon parade, being put on
bv the Olant Balloon Parades. Inc..
of Newark, N. J., Is sponsored bv
the Klsiimth Merchants association
The parade will Include balloons
such as a giant Christmas slock
ing, giant dragons. Ice cream
cones,, candy canes, and novelties
such aa big-headed clowns, dolls,
lollypopa and others.
Psrade time la 11 a.m.. with the
parade assembling at Modoc field
and moving down Main street to
2nd, end then will return lo Mo
doc field along Klamath avenue.
Canada Cold
Front Coming
By the Associated Press
The coldest weather ever record
ed so esrly in the season numbed
areas In the east and southeast
today, but warmer weather was
forecast for Thanksgiving.
The temperature dipped to rero
at Phlllpsburg. In the mountains
of central Pennsylvania, and the
highest reading In the state was
a frosty 22 above In Philadelphia,
It was live below aero at Kane,
Pa., and one below at Ridgway,
Pa.
Zero cold also atung the Saranao
Lake region In northern New York,
while Elmtra. In southern New
York, shivered In eight above.
Buffalo, N.Y., recorded 14 above,
Burlington, VI.. 13. and New York
26.
Newark, N.J. had an all-time
record low for the date of 24 four
degrees under Uie previous mark
set in 1933.
7V freezing weather extended
to Uie south, with Atlanta record
ing 26 and New Orleans 38. Augus
ta, lOa), had a record low for
the date, of 19.
But It looks like ' a cold and
snowy holiday for many Western
areas, coin air lrom Canada
spread southward over Montana
and North Dakota today. Temper
atures were far below treealng.
Light anow fell In Uie plains states.
Temperatures also were below sea
sonal levels In the far west.
Superiority
In Air Fails
WASHINGTON. (Al - Oen. Hoyt
Vandenberg aald today the Allies'
"complete air superiority over Ko
rea Is now. being seriouslv chal
lenged by the Migs but' so far
uie situation is in hand."
The air force chief of staff told
a long and grim news conference
Uiat possible "serious potentials"
exist. Among these he listed the
fact that "overnight China has be
come one of the major air powers
of the world."
Vandenberg added that the Pel-
plng regime obviously has attained
that status "as the direct benefi
ciary of another power possessing
the essential .Industrial and tech
nical . resources that Communist
China itself lacks."
He did not mention 1 Russia by
name.
Vandenberg, Just back, from the
Korean war front, also said:
"Under the ground rules estab
lished at the outset of the Korean
war. It Is Impossible for us lo
gain air aupremecy" because "for
reasons that we all understand, we
have followed a policy of not at
tacking the strongholds of enemy
air power directly across the Yalu"
river In Manchuria, .
By Ueds, StaHH Missnmig
Fries Five Cents 3 Pages
CCioig
Truce Hopes Brighten As
Communists Come Up With
Ambiguous
MUN8AN. Korea, Truce
hopes brightened today when Com
munist negotiators submitted a
cease-lire plan ol their own that
could open the way for a Korean
armistice by Christmas.
It was similar to a United Na
tions plan lor creating a Duller
wine along the present lighting line
to lasc eueci u an armistice la
signed within 30 days.
A U.N. command communique
referred lo the resemblance as su
perficial.
But the command's official
spokesman, Bug. Gen. William P-1
Nuckols, said If the Red plan '
"means what we think It means
. . , then I think we are very .
close to solution" of the buffer
zone question. I
The point in doubt was whether I
the Communist proposal means;
"Uiat troops will be withdrawn :
from the buffer zone after an arm-1
lstice Is signed" ss the U.N. has!
proposed. I
Alter the Communists submitted
their counterproposal at Panrnun-;
Jom at Wednesday' two-our truce!
session, allied negotiators tried to
determine whether the Reds con
templated an immediate or delayed
withdrawal from a bufler zone to
be created along the present lront.
At the close of the session MaJ.
Gen. Henry I. Hodes. heading the
U. N. subcommittee, told the Red
delegates "we will present you
with the necessary revisions to
clear up this proposal" at Thurs
day's meeting. U is set for 11
a. m.
At Panmunjom Nuckols' said
there were traces of fundamental
dlflerences between the Allied and
" prepoaiia. we said the Com.
munisi pian contained "rather am-
France Asks
U.S. Backing
WASHINGTON. im An urgent
request from France for fast dol
lar assistance from the U.S. today
heightened the possibility that the
aaministraUon may ask congress
early next year for a special for
eign, aid appropriation.
Britain Is In about the same
economic plight as France. In fact,
almost all this country's European
allies were described bv authorities
as requiring considers ble helD 'o
maintain their delense production
and their scheduled contributions
to Oen. Dwight D. Elsenhower's
Western European military force.
Officials told newsmen that with
in the next few days the U. S.
government will probably make
final decision on how much help
the French need. Estimates range
from t20O.OO0.OO0 to (400.000.000.
That would be direct assistance
aside from the dollars the French
may earn from American troops
stationed In their country and from
American expenditures for mili
tary Installations there.
France has told the United
States, according to these Informed
sources, who may not be named,
that Its anticipated dollar earnings
are such that It will have to cut
imports and reduce its defense op
erations unless special help is
forthcoming promptly.
Port Crime
Probe Starts
NEW YORK, WV-The states of
New York and New Jersey are
teaming up for a drive against
waterfront crime and racketeering
In the port ot New York.
Conferences have been held be
tween Gov. Thomas E. Dewey and
New Jersey Gov. Alfred E. Drlscoll
on launching the first concerted
two-state cleanup along the piers.
Dewey ordered the New York
state crime commission last night
to make a "sweeping Investiga
tion" on a port-wide basis.
Dewey said he wanted to root
out "racketeering, organized crime
and restrictive practices which
have Increasingly over the past SO
years hamstrung the port of New
York."
Dewey said he and Gov. Drlscoll
are engaged "in the process of
working out a bl-state cooperative
effort which will be announced
when the time comes."
At Trenton, N.J., Drlscoll said
Dewev's order for a commission
Investigation was "good news,"
and he told ot recent conferences
with the New York governor.
Members of the New York crime
commission and. a number of New
Jersey police and prosecuting of
ficials have been Included in Inter
state conferences. .
The state crime commission, an
Investigatory body, does not have
the power to Indict or prosecute.
Dewey's announcement did not
mention any Individual or group
targets of the waterfront probe,
BIG MEAL
8ALEM, UU Inmates ol all slate
Institutions will get turkey and ail
the trimmings tomorrow.
KLAMAT' V AEGON,
diies
Plan For Peace
bluuoua and vague phraseology. "
I But at a later brlellng for the
i press In Munsan he said:
"I am more optimistic than I
1 have been for some time past.
I "The basic point at Issue Is when
. the bufler zone will be cleared of
troops."
I Under questioning of Hodes.
North Korean Ma). Gen. Lee Song
! Clio aald "the troops will be with
drawn after the agreement Is
signed."
Icy Streets
Send Cars
Into Spins
Icy pavement this morning
caused on iraiim imiirai nn it
U. s. 1 Klamath river'bridge and
a near muss.
A 1938 siudcbaker coupe driven
by Louis L. Bell. Concord. Calif..
crashed through a guard rail on
the south eno of the bridge and
almost dropped into the river.
Bell was not Injured, state po
lice reported.
The investigating officer stated
Bell said be started to skia, put
on his brakes, clipped the fender
ot an unidentified car and then
crashed through Uie rail.
bhortlv alletwards. the officer
stated, ; a' "car traveling north
slowccf down on seeing uie accl.
uem. when It accelerated again,
the car skidded sideways down the
bridge Into the path of two on
coming freight trucks. But the cur
was straightened out Just in time
lo avoid a major accident the stau
patrolman stated.
Slippery streets in town sent
many motorists this morning mer
rily spinning to work, but no acci
dents involving Injuries were, re
ported to city or state police.
Yesterday afternoon an OTI stu
dent, 30-year-old Harold E. Rooo
Jr., overturned his car in a ditcn
in the 300 block on Old Fort Road.
Roop was taken to Klamath Val
ley hospital by Kaler's ambulance
and then to a doctor's office. He
was reported not injured.
In municipal court this morning
Roop was fined 650 on charge of
reckless driving.
Check Cashing
Warning Given
Local merchants this morning
were Issued a warning by the dis
trict attorney's office to be careful
during the coming shopping season
in cashing customers' checks.
Dlst. Atty. D. E. Van Vector
emnhaslrrd that caution In this re
gard would save merchants a lot
of monev and the district attor
ney's office a lot of work.
Before accepting a check for any
purchase. Van Vactor said, a mer
chant should ask for positive iden
tification from the purchases. If
that i not available. Van Vactor
added, a check should be made
with the bank on which the check
is drawn to see if the customer
has a bank account,
with those nrecautions. the dis
trict attorney concluded, the sea
sonal rush of bad. no account ana
sv hwir will be stooped at
their source and also the seasonal
crime wave.
Spud Shipping
Pace Fast
Shipments ot Klamath potatoes
continued at a fast pace this week
with no shipments falling below
the 76-car mark per day.
Tuesday alone saw 87 ' cars
shipped outbound to market from
here, according to ine state Depart
ment nf agriculture inspector's of
fice here. To date this season 2555
cars have gone to market.
Last year at this time only 1734
cars had been shipped.
Favorable potato, prices, report
edly exceeding the $4 per hundred
wpicrht' mark In some sectors, are
considered by experts as the most
likely reason for the last-stepping
spuds uns year,
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity and northern California:
Cloudy with occasional showers or
snow flurries tonight.- sunny to
morrow, after early morning fog.
Low tonight 29, high tomorrow 46.
Precln last 24 hours :-. .11
Preclp since Oct. 1 .....3.18
Nims nerlnil last vear .6.36
Normal lor period 2.2!
(Additional Weather en Page 4)
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1951
Tan Scandal
Professor Says
Comic Books Not
Harmful to Read
EAST LAN8INO, Mich, iPh
A Michigan State college pro
lessor vno spent six months
reading comic books concludes,
"they're not so bad."
Dr. Morton Malter, assistant
professor of education, read
through 10.440 pages of 185 com
ic books as part of a researcn
protect.
His report:
"General aUacks on comic
magazines are unwarranted. It
is not true that they are dom
inated by crime, sex and vio
lence and 90 percent of them
would be acceptable for publi
cation in newspapers."
The proiessor said that by
percentages, adventure, animal
antics and western stories out
number love. detecUve and su
perman stories. Advertising had
the greatest single percentage
15.7, with westerns second with
11.
"Good" comic books, the pro
fessor concluded, "greatly out
number the unacceptable ones."
BULLETINS
OPERATION 1
SACRAMENTO, I Gover
nor Earl -Warren underwent an
operaUon at the L Diversity ot
California hospital today for re
moval of his appendix' and a
number of abdominal adhesions,
the governor's office reported.
He la a candidate for the Repub
lican nemlnatloat for president.
NO OIL .
msenflsmTiw is GuhIih,
Chapmaa today turned down the'
move oy t- uora ana outers
U get oil-rich submerged coastal
lands In exchange for old gov
ernment land scrip.
L I a d a Swarta. eight-year-old
daughter of William Swarts. a
woodcutter In the King Cole area,
was brought te Klamath Valley
hospital early this afternoon for
treatment ot a gunshot wound in
her left hand.
According to state police.
Swarts said he hung a loaded XI
automatic in the tenthouse resi
dence, and the girl apparently
discharged It accidently while
working In the room.
A bullet entered at the base ot
her thumb and came out a finger
on her left hand.
Po Rescue
Work Pushed
MILAN. Italy. IAV-Rescue work.
ers saurred efforts today to clear
marooned towns and villages in
the Po river delta oetore uireai
ened new flood crests could roll
down Italy's biggest river.
Steady rains at the headwaters
of the Po and along many of its
tributaries in northern Italy in
creased fears of new dangers in
the area, where 100 have lost their
lives in the past week and thou
sands have been made homeless.
Working around the clock, rescue
teams, including British and Amer
ican army units from Trieste,
fought tricky currents and swirling
debris to remove 8500 persons from
the town of Adria and nearby vil
lages. Allied headquarters in Trieste
said the British and American de
tachments were being reinforced.
At Mantova, about 60 miles east
of the provincial capital of Rxivigo,
the center of the disaster area,
the Po was reported rising grad
ually. So far. however, trie flood
level in the delta area below was
dropping. Officials hoped the rain
waters would run off before they
reached the stricken delta.
THREE-WAY Malin elementary school's cleverly designed new addition (above) was the
center of attraction at last night's Malin Parent-Patron "meeting. The new unit, through
ingenious space use, offers adequate auditorium, gymnasium, cafeteria and kitchen. It
was designed by Morrison and Howard. At last night's meeting, talks were made by
, County School Supt. Carrol Howe and attorney William Ganong Jr. A skit was offered
by Mr. and Mrs floy Anderson and uie v w auxiliary presented ine scnooi wim a nag.
Telephone Sill
No. 2667
Bay City
Mint Boss
Quits Post
WASHINGTON. IM A house
ways and means committee was
called into session today to weigh
a report on Its Inquiry into rumors ;
that its chairman. Rep. King (D
Callf ), once sought to influence tax
cases. . - ,
King has denounced the rumors
as "malicious and false" and di
rected his subcommittee to Investi
gate them thoroughly. While It did
so. he turned Uie chairmanship
over to Rep. Combs (D-Texasi.
The group heard nearly a dozen
witnesses, during two days of In
vestigation, and wound up the in
quiry late last night. It issued no
statement, but Its chief counsel,
Adrian Dewind, told newsmen:
"Relevant tesUmony to the alle
gaUons of tax case mishandling
. . . will be released in verbatim
form in conjuncuon with a report.'
The subcommittee, which has
been inquiring into the widening
reports of irregularities and scan
dals in the naUon's tax collection
service, meanwhile received oossl.
ble grist for its mill from news
papers In two ciUes.
FIX SOUGHT
In St. Louis, both the Post-Dis
patch and the Globe - Democrat
charged that Ellis N. Slack, acting
head of the justice department's
tax division, sought to interfere
with a grand Jury inquiry Into tax
fixing there.
- In San Francisco, - trfe 'fcamlner
reported that "someone high in
Washington" has ordered an inves
tigaUon inside the internal revenue
office there to find out "who let
the cat out of the bag." -
San Francisco collector James
Smyth and six ot bis aides have
been suspended on charges of In
competency and two other em
ployes have been fired outright.
The Examiner quoted Charles E.
Davies, San Francisco head of the
treasury department's intelligence
unit, as saying he "received orders
to conduct such a probe and ac
cordingly set up such an assign
ment." He would not elaborate.
One angle which the King sub
committee has been inquiring into
is the outside business acUvities of
tax collectors.
The superintendent of the San
Francisco mint, also an arm of the
treasury department, resigned yes
terday rather than give up a pri
vate Insurance business. He is
George B. Gillin.
The treasury said Gillin, who
held the $10,800 a year post for
three and a halt years, will step
out effective Nov. 30 rather than
relinquish his private business.
Victim Of
Kidnap Better
' PORTLAND. L4t Doretha Linn,
wounded Monday night as her ex-
husband used her as a shield from
police bullets, was reported mask
ing "remarkable recovery" at
Good Samaritan hospital.
Thomas G. Reames. 26, the for
mer husband, today faced kidnap
ing as well as assault charges.
James E. McKillop signed the kid
naping charge. He and Miss Linn
were forced by Reames to leave
their office Monday and accompany
him on a ride which led to her
apartment and then to the shoot
ing affray.
Reames' father, Charles . W.
Reames, Medford attorney, told police-
be would defend his son in
court. The son's bail is set at $25,-000.
II X'?' .tifi. -i - i
Diplomatic
Cargo With
Lost C-47
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia. I
Hungary and Romania comalalned
officially today that a United
Biam army cargo plane aim
missing after being fired on by the
satellite border guards Monday
crossed orer their territories illeg
ally.
Notes were presented to the
American mlssiona In Budapest
and Bucharest, even aa U. 8.
planes prepared lo aearcb ever
Yugoslavia for the missing C-47
transport, which disappeared Mon
day with four crewmen and diple
maue cargo aooara.
The two eominform countries
maintain a tight control all along
their borders with Yog oalavla.
The notes were presented after
American tnqulrlea were mado
concerning the whereabouts of the
plane, whose pilot had radioed hi
base at Munich Monday afternoon
that he had been fired upon by
the border patrols of the two coun
tries and had turned back weit
ward. ..
NO DAMAGE '
The pilots reports, aa disclosed
by the U.S. embassy In Belgrade,
did not mention any damage from
the shooting.
. Bad weather - hampered the
search. Fifteen V. 8. air force
planes were poised at Trevtso in
Northern Italy, at the Juncture of
Uie Italian, Austrian and Yugoslav
borders, ready for the word that
would send them over an area of
7008 square miles, much of it
craggy mountains and wooded
bills.
The plane, carrying a general
cargo- for the embassy here, was
last reported somewhere north of
Belgrade at dusk Monday, with its
gasoline running low. Jt was at
tempting to retrace Its route back
to tdlne, near Trieste, In the hope
of refuelling there.
Premier Marshal Tito's govern
ment gave the search planes per
mission to fly over the Northwest
part of Yugoslavia, an area pre
viously forbidden to foreign planes
which had been confined to several
well-defined air corridors ever the
country. .
xugosiav border gnaras reportra
seeing the plane Monday near both
the Hungarian and Romanian bor
ders, far off its scheduled route.
Belief was expressed here tnat in
pilot mistook the-Drara river for
the Sava river, which it was sup
posed to follow. The V. S. embassy
here said the pilot probably rea
lized he was off coarse when ho
waa fired on, and then turned back
westward. Hut last' report to his
oase near mniucn, uermany. waa
that he was low on fuel and unsure
whether he could make Venice for
an emergency landing. -
A search waa also directed over
the northern Adriatic Sea, en the
possibility the pilot may hay
come down In the sea. .
Road Report ;
Shows Snow '
..
SALEM. W The state highway
commission's daily road report:
Government camp and Timber
line snowing lightly, packed snow.
plowing, carry chains. 1 to 3 Inches
new snow. .,-.,
Warm Springs snowing lightly,
packed snow, plowing,-carry chains.
Sisklyous spots of ice.
Ochoco snowing lightly, spots ot
ice. 4 inches new snow.'
Bend spots of ice, trace ot new
snow.
Santiam Pass spots of Ice, I
inches new snow.
McKenzie Pass packed snow,
plowing, carry chains. 4 inches new
snow. -
Lapine spots of ice, 4 Inches new
snow. ' - ' ' ,; .
Willamette Pass snowing lightly
packed snow, well sanded.
Chemult, Klamath Falls spots of
ice. ,. . ,
Bly packed snow, sanded.
Keno slush, pack breaking up.
Meacham slush, pack breaking
up.
Baker 'snowing lightly, pack
breaking up.
Burns packed snow.' plowing,'
chains rcotiired. 1 inch new snow.
SHOOTING HOURS
November 22 .
Open 6:36 . Close 3:48
vuttsama"! '. .'I