HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH PALLS. OREGON WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, lQr2 PAGE TWO Wit I1KA Vm PUT ill i itu mmvt m a Wednesday Evtnlnr, Jan. t 6:00 Gibritl Hotter M1IS 6:19 Klamath Thaaltr Qui 6:30 Around Town Ntwi 6:49 Sam Hayas News MBa) 6:U Bill lltnry MBS 1 00 Mrstartotit Travaltr MBS 1 30 Claco Kid MBS 6:00 Whal's Nama Vint MBS 6:30 Behind Ih. Story MBS 6:45 Heldtlberg Harmonalrea S 00 Clinn Hardy Nawa MBS 6:19 rulton Lwtt Jr. 0:30 Wrestllm 0:.1S S-Mln. Final MBS J1:00 Wrastllnf 11:19 1 Lovt Myattry MBS 10:30 International Airport MBS 11.00 Nuhl Owla Nea 11:09 Miht OwU Club 1S:00 Sln 0(1 ' KFJI list Re PST Thursday, Jan. 3 6:00 Musical Reveille 6:45 Farmars' Bulletla Board 0:35 Local Newi 1 00 Hemlnwa -Newa MBS 7:15 Breakfast Gang MBS 7:30 News 7:43 Beit Bu 8:00 Cecil Brown MBS 8:13 Breakfast Ganc MBS 6:30 Haven of Rett MBS 6:00 Homemalters Harmonies 6:15 Marlon from Mtltcra 8:30 Son of Pioneers B 43 TavoriUa of Yesterday 10.00 Glenn Hardy Newa MBS 10:13 Tello Test 10:30 LaPolntet 10:45 Miniature Concert 10:50 Helen Dot ft 10:55 Kewa MBS 11:00 Ladlea Fair MBS 11:25 Newa MBS 11:30 Queen for a Day MBS 12:00 Name. Banda 12:15 Newa Headline! . 111:30 Your Dance Tunei 12:43 Market Livestock 12:53 Newa MBS 1:00 Jack Ktrkwood Show MBS 1:30 Tune Test 1:59 Local Newa 2:00 Newa MBS 2:09 Newa 2:19 Flatter Party . 2:40 Talk Back MBS 2:45 Answer Man MBS 3:03 Ricky's Bequest . 4:00 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 4:13 Hemintrivay News MBS -4:30 Speed Gibson MBS ' 8:01 Sergeant Preitin ME3 8:30 Sky King MBS :S3 Tex Fletcher MBS 0:00 Gabriel Healter MBS 0:15 Klam. Ttieater Quia 6:30 Around Town Newa . 6:43 Sam Hayes Newa MBS 6:35 Bill Henry MBS 7:00 Harmony Time 7:13 Sports Album 7:30 Family Theatra MES 8:00 Tanan MBS 8:30 Behind the Story MBS 8:43 Heidelberg Harmonaires 6:00 Glenn Hardy Newa MBS 8:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 0:30 Rod at Cun Club UBS 6:35 5-Min. Final MBS 10:00 I Love A Mystery 10:15 Murder by Experts MBS 10:43 U.S. Navy Band 11:00 Night Owla News 11:05 Night Owla Club 12:00 Sign Off. KFLW 1450 Kc PST Wednesday Evening, Jan. X 6:00 Sports Highlights State Roads All Open -Says Report ' SALEM CD Snow and Ice cot ered Eastern Oregon and the mowrUim areas Wednesday,- the State Highway Commission report ed. . Ttift marl rPDOrt: - nnwnmpnt Camrj and Timber" . line Packed snow, plowing, car- ' ry chains. Wilson River summit Bare In exposed areas. Sunset summit Packed snow, ' well sanded. Warm Barings Junction Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Cascade Locks Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Newport Spots of ice. Salmon River summit Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Grants Pass Spots of tee. Union Creek and Siskiyous Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Coqullle Spots of Ice. The Dalles Snowing lightly, spots of ice. Mitchell Bare in exposed areas. Bend Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Santiam Pass Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Willamette Pass Packed snow, sanded. Chemult Packed snow, sanded.. Bly Packed snow, sanded. Lakevlow ., Bare in exposed areas. Pendleton Packed snow, sand '. cd. Meacham Packed snow, sand ed. La Orande, Baker, Ontario, John Day icy spots. Austin and Seneca Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Burns Packed snow, sanded. V KLAMATH FALLS. S8Ofc AMERICAN CHINESE Food at their bast! k. MM Fei Orders To T.kg Oil Ben B. Lee, Mar. CLEANING FLUSHING REPAIRING BALSIGER MOTOR CO. Main at Esplanade Ph. 3121 I COMPLETE I I RADIATOR I I SERVICE 0:18 Home Town Newa 6:29 World Newa Summary, 6:30 Suburban Serenade 6:45 Headllna Edition ABC 6:35 Coming Atlractiona on ABC 7:00 The Long Banner ABC : Mystery Thealer ABC 8:00 The Top Guy ABC 6:30 Rogues Caller ASC 6 00 Proudly We Hall 8:30 Northwest Artists 10:00 10 P M Headlines 10:13 Dream Harbor ABC 10:S0 Insomnia Club 11:00 New Summary 11:01 Sign Oft KFLW 15 Ke. rST Thursday, Jan. I 6:00 Sign on Newa Summary 6:05 Corn In the Morn. 0:43 Farm Far 7:00 News Bkfst Edition 7:13 Charlles Roundup 7:80 Bob Garred A Newa ABC 7:40 Top of the Morning 7:53:John Conte ABC 8 00 Breakfast Club ABC 6 00 Hank Henry Show 8:30 Break the Bank ABC 10:00 Chet Huntley, Newa ABC 10:13 Lone Journey ABC 10:30 My Trvt Story Ar.C 10:33 Edward Arnold ARC 1100 Betty Crocker ABC 11:13 Slop Si Shop 11:30 Jlmmle Fldler 11:S0 Against the Storm ABC 11:43 Musical Roundup 12:00 Noon Edition News 12:15 Payless Sidewalk Show '5:30 Lucky U Ranch ABC i:O0 Paul Harvey ABC 1:13 Better Living 1:30 Mary Margaret McBrida ABC 2:00 Basin Briefs 2:13 Accent on Melody 2:30 Joyce Jordan, M.D. ABC 2:45 Rom. Evelyn Winters ABC 3:00 Ted Malone ABC 3:13 When Girl Marries ABC 3:30 Perfect Husband ABC 4:00 Mary Marlln ABC 4:13 Reouestfullv Youra 3:oo Tom Corbett. Soaca Patrol ABC 3:29 Will Rogers ABC 3:30 Chet Huntley ABC 3:43 It's Movie Time 6 OO Sports Highlights 6:13 Heme Town Newr 6:23 World News Summary 6:30 Suburban Serenade 6:43 Keadlin EdIUon ABC 6:35 Coming Attractions on ABC 7:00 Mr President ABC 7:30 Barbershop Harmonies 7:43 Serenade in Blue 8:00 Oris. Amateur Hr. ABC 8:45 Organ Male 8:00 Hollywood Star Playhouse AEC 9:30 Concert of Europe ABC 10:00 10 P M Headlines 10:13 Club Can Do ABC 10:30 Insomnia Club 11:00 News Summary 11:01 Sign Oft Litvinoff, Red Planner, Dies At 75 By EDDY GTXMORE MOSCOW Wl An official foreign office announcement disclosed Wednesday the death of Maxim Maximovlch Litvinoff, who keynot ed his collective security policy as Soviet Foreign Commissar with toe often-quoted declaration, "peace is maivisioie." tie was 7s. Litvinoff died Dec. 31 and fu neral arrangements were complete wnen His death was announced Wednesday. His body lay in state in a Foreign Ministry Conference hall where friends end colleagues passed by to pay their respects. The luneral was scheduled Wednesdayvaftcmoon. Pravda, organ of the' Central Committee of the Communist par ty, on which Litvinoff had been a member, railed him an ' old Bol shevik and outstanding Soviet dip lomat." Pravda's obituary notice was eight paragraphs long. It was print ed on the back page. Litvinoff won Western recognition for Bolshevist Russia and fought without success for collective force to prevent World War II. He was a wartime ambassador to Wash ington. But LItvlnoff's fortunes rose and fell with the Kremlin's feelings about the Western democracies. and he was completely eclipsed after he was fired in the reduced rank of deputy foreign minister in 1946. His fall from office fore shadowed the cold war. for of all Soviet officials he was regarded as the one who truly wanted to get along with tne west. 367 Die In Car Vrecks By The Associated Press The four-day New Year's week end took 602 lives In violent ac cidents, bringing the death toll from Christmas and New Year ac cidents to nearly 1,400. Traffic mishaps, as usual, ac counted for the greatest toll over tiie New Year holiday 367 dead. Another 69 perished in fires, and 166 were victims of miscellaneous accidents, including plane crashes. me national safety council had estimated 350 perrons would be kil led in traffic mishaps during the New Year holiday. The toll from a variety of mis cellaneous accidents was boosted by the crash of an Air Force C-47 plane on a Central Arizona moun tain, with a loss of 28 lives: and the wreck of a nonscheduled C-46 airliner in the AUegheny foothills of New York State, in which 23 persons died. The four-day death toll still was lower than the record 789 total for the previous week's four day Christ mas nonaay. mat ion included 535 traffic victims. General Hans Frci BOOKKEEPING Service 22S U. tth Phone 2-0J93 "ROYAL- HEARING AID miWfiO PAY tjj. I -BOM TON I H 1 BAKE - "If anybody calls up and asks for 'Sugar Apple Pie,' that's me!" Oregon, Idaho PRINEVILLE. Ore. W Potato grower organizations of Oregon and Idaho, faced with a possibil ity of price ceilings early m the new year, are urging Price Ad ministrator Mike Disaiie to noia olf. That was reported Monday by Ben Davidson. Oregon Potato com mission administrator, after get ting word Saturday that the ceil ings were imminent. Davidson said that a telegram County Jail Roster Light With sending of two more pris oners to the Oregon State Prison at Salem this mornng, the County Jail Inmate roster was reduced to six persons. Dale Douglas Fennlng, 21, and Kenneth Mack Anderson, 26, were taken to Salem early this morning by Deputy Sheriff Murray Britton. Fenning is to serve three years for forgery on revocation of pro bation given him last July. Anderson got two years on plead ing guilty to theft of potatoes from a Qreat Nortnern railroad car at Adams Point in the latter part of November. Besse Heads "X" Post OREGON STATE COLLEGE Ralph S. Besse, associate director of the Oregon State college agricul tural experiment station, was re cently re-elected to his third four year term as representative of the 11 western states on the national experiment station organization and policy committee. This committee reviews ail poli cies and organization of the entire experiment station setup in the 48 states and their relations with the federal office of experiment sta tions. The OSC director has served two terms as chairman of directors for the 11 western states. Operation Cocktail Proves Helpful SAItANAC LAKE. N.Y.. WV-Po- lice Chief William Wallace's report on "operation cocktail": Five mer rymakers escorted home, no accidents.- The New Year's Eve mission marked the third year police in this Adirondack Mountain village had offered and had given free rides to revelers who felt they couldn't find their way home un- aioca. Battle Casualties Listed In Report WASHINGTON W) The Defense Department Wednesday identified 81 more battle casualties in Korea. A new list reported 17 dead, 49 wounded, six missing in action, one prisoner of war and eight In jured. It also listed 14 killed who were previously reported missing. New Ag Man Takes Over At Eugene SALEM Wl Gordon V. Schwal en, is the new State Department of Agriculture iieldman at Eugene. He succeeds O. F. Anderson who retired Monday. Al3o reported here Monday were three other retirements in the state shipping point inspection service. They are A. T. Lathrop, Central Point; D. C. Goddard, Talent; and J. R, Wilcox, Hood River. Klamath Basin Is the alsike clo ver seed capital of the world. NOTHING ,7 .",?.'1w Znlth "Royal" hetrlnt aid for 10 daya. If you're not completely -satisfied return tiie Instrument and GET YOUR MONEY BACKI Only $5 A Month No Down Pavment 715 Main Street Spudmen Urge Ceiling Hold Off from Whitney Thsrlln. executive secretary of the National Potnto Council, said that because the national potats price on Dec. 15 averaged $1.93 a bushel, and the national parity price was $1.83, an OPS ceiling price order had been prepared. He said he thought it would go into effect within 10 days. Davidson said he had no infor mation on the rollback to be soug'it If the order were lssued-nor could he say what erfect telegrams and letters to DISalle from croups and growers might have. He said he thought it possible DISalle might listen to some of the protests. A number of them, he said, told DiSalle potato ceilings would be a poor move politically as well as economically. NW Atlas Being Revised OREGON STATE COLLEGE The Atla3 of fie Northwest, an im portant source of Information on northwest resources and cevelop ment, will be revised under the di rection of a member of the Oregon State college school of science staff, OSC officials have announced. Much of the material in the sec ond edition of the Atlas, issued in 1942 by the Nortnwest Regional council, is now out of date and a complete revision including consid erable exoansion is planned. The revision will be directed by Dr. Richard M. Highsmlth Jr. as a cooperative effort with assistance from OSC specialists and federal, state and private agencies. The Atlas is intended to be of parties lar value to teachers, researchers, planneT3 and industrial and bus iness leaders. All of the present maps will be revised and re-drawn on the basis of latest information. A scries of new nuns, showing agricultural land utilization, grazing lands and water resources, is also piannea in the new edition. A page of text of analysis and interpretation will face each map. Dr. Highsmlth has started prelim inary organization and will devote the entire summer of 1953 to the project. Publication date has been set for April, 1953. Bodies Of Navy Men Recovered HONG KONG Wl The U.S. Na vy said Wednesday the bodies of lour crewmen nave oeen recov ered from an amphibious plane that crashed and sank in 30 feet of water off Hong Kong Monday. It said four survivors were ex pected to recover from injuries. No names have been released. Mineral Plant To Be Constructed JOHN DAY I.H Construction of a mineral concentrating plant in this Eastern Oregon region is planned in the spring, Irving B. Hazeltine, chamber of commerce secretary, has reported. John Hayes will build the plant to handle chrome and other Grant County ores, Hazeltine said. . Millions Spent On Western Roads PORTLAND, (Pi The U.S. Bu reau of Public Roads spent 33 mil lions dollars for highways in four Pacific Northwest States during 1951, officials here reported at year's end. An additional 25 million was handled by the agency as match ing money from the states of Ore gon, Washington, Idaho and Mon tana. Major Oregon construction job was the new highway into the John Day River Valley. Hans Norland 627 Pine St. Auto Insurance, 413351' yaw fJTiW rtrrr, ft; ifi?ii Bureau Raises Threat to Refuges 7 In Tulana Lease, Letter Charges SACRAMENTO MV A major threat to waterfowl, conservation in the Pacillc Flyway has been raised by the Bureau of Reclamation, it was disclosed this week In letter from Seth Gordon, director of the California Department of Full and Game, to Interior Secretary Guctvr L, Chapmnn, In a nutshell, the Reclamation Bareau proposos to wreck the great ! Y htm I jR .aaaa6 aaae lesaaaaasl flM llaaratrll'll ti" it I OPEN HOUSE AT BONANZA, January 6, from two to five in the afternoon for the friends of Mr. anil Mrs. Lester Lcavitt, will be given by them in St. Barnabas Parish Hall, on the occasion of their 25th wedding anniversary. Photo by Guderian Outsider Is 1st Prisoner An outsider sained the dubious honor this year of being the first prisoner booknl on the County Jail roster on New Year's Day. Albert T. Allen, enroute from California to Oroflno. Ida., was booked at 5:30 p.m. yesterday. Last prisoner w ritten on the dock et for 1951 was Richard Harvey, 33, Chlloquln, sentenced to DO days on conviction of bring drunk In a puDiic p:ace oy me wooa Kiver Justice Court at Chlloquln. Harvey was prisoner No. 691 for 1951. First person to be booked in 1951 was Eddison Tuppcr of Chllo quln on a charge of drunk driving. At the City Jail. 2877 persons were booked during 1951. Of that number 1601 were arrested on drunk charges. The last person entered on the City Jail blotter m 1951 was LeRoy Worden, booked at 11:13 p.m. on charge of making an Improper U tiirn on Klamath between 8th and 9ih. He paid II fine In Municipal Court this morning. First person to be booked at the City Jail for tho New Year was a 19-year-old housewife, Mrs. Con stance Cook. She was arrested on a drunk and disorderly conduct charge, follow ing s fracas at the Armorv, and entered In the police blotter at 13:41 a.m., Jan. 1, 1953. Police records ahowed Thomas Barrett as the first person arrested in 1951 at the City Jail. He was booked at 1:50 a.m., Jan. 1, 1931, on charge of drunk driving. Man Surrenders, Starts Out Fresh PORTLAND in A man walked into police headquarters Tuesday and told officers he was wanted in two states. Charles Henry Meier. 22. said he was wanted in Valley City. N. D., for deserting his wife and three children, and in Conrad, Mont., for check forgery. He said hr. sur rendered because he wanted to get a fresh start this new year. Logs Remain At Ceiling Price CORVALLIS ID -f-Graded Doug las fir sawlogs remained steady at celling prices In the last half of December at Willamette Valley mills, the State Farm Forest Pro ducts Market Report said Wednes day. OPS quotes on prices for camp run logs, but sales may be made on application for a celling price. Other forest products were most ly unchanged. Grants Pass Has Good Road Record GRANTS PAS3 (IP) Nobody In this area got hurt in highway ac cidents over tho long New Year's week-end, and police made no drunken-driving arrests. The only unusual mishap occurred early Tuesday when a car driven by John L. Mudd of Los Angeles skld ed from the highway north of here and hit the wreckage of a car which has skidded at the same spot four hours before. Tho lirst driver was Tom Lyons of Azalea. MARCH STARTS PORTLAND (m The annual March of Dimes for funds for polio caro and research got underway in Oregon Wednesday. , The month-long drive will be the most Intensive on record, officials said. Tule Lake and Lower Klamath Waiarlowl Kelugcs In Northern California, nullllylng the millions 0 aouars wnicu nave uern apom to preserve the duck population In Its wintering grounds and to pre vent crop depredations. Gordon's letter of protest was written after an article appearing in the weekly Tule Lake Reporter hnd quoted a Reolnnmtlnn Bureau directive from Undersecretary of 1 $ s Rotary Plans Vater Forum The first of a series of talks on the development of water resources in the Klamath Basin has been scheduled as the program ior this Friday at the Klamath Rotary club. It was announced by Mike Balslgcr, program chairman. Frank Jenkins, Herald and News publisher, will open the series with a talk, "Tho Place o Water In the Development of the Klamath Basin." Luton Stephens, of the re clamation bureau, will npeak on the same program on water develop ment trcm tne oureau s standpoint. On the following Fridays. Jan. II and 18, Rotary will hear John Boyle of Copco give tho utility's viewpo.ut and Fred Rueck. Klamath farmer, give the farmers' side of the ques tion. iLXssaaaaLija-- '---- By MYRTLE WIMER Now, let It be hoped that the miscreants observed the sad con dition of the stolen turkeys and did not have them for Christmas dinner; however. In the event that they noticed nothing amiss and cooked and ate the birds, the Copelands hope that the after-effects were not too drastic, but they do admit that they hope that the thieves experienced at least some discomfort as a result ot eat ing the sick turkeys: for while It Is true that tho owners suffered no loss on account of the Christmas Eve depredation, this doesn't alter the fact that the sneak thieves in tentions were strictly dishonorable, they had no way of knowing that the turkeys they took wero sick and bclnir kept only In the hone that their malady could be cured. Let it be hoped that this win be a lesson to this person or persons, whichever the case may be, and If there were any 111 effects, It Is Just retribution for committing such an act on the Holy Eve of the Saviour s Birtnciny. The saying, of "Crime doesn't nay" may be trite Indeed, but surely fits this case and tho crime of stealing the turkeys may have even boomcrangcu II tney were tno main course of someone's Christ mas dinner hereabouts. Klamath Oil Meet Called Tonight A mcetlnz of Klamath Basin stockholders In Klamath Oil, Inc., nas Been cancel for 7:30 tonight in the Wlllard hotel, Tho company, which has under taken drilling operations near Roundup, Mont., has stockholders In much of the Northwest. However officers of the company called this meeting for local stockholders. R. P. Oliver Is president of the oil group, which has scheduled Its annual meeting Jan. 8 in Lewis town, Mont. Grant County Names Sheriff CANYON CITY l Robert Da mon of. Mount Vernon, Ore., Is tho new sheriff of Grant County. Ho was named to succeed Oliver Calhoun, resigned. Calhoun said he was unable to support his fam ily on tho job s salary. The salary. $3,000, Is listed In the Oregon Blue Book as tied with that of Wallowa County as lowest In the state. Ten others are under $4,000. Air Spray Class To Be Opened SALEM Wl Courses will bo frlven at Oregon State College Jan. 28-30 for persons who plan to spray crops from the air, the State Agri culture Department said Wednes day. State examinations for those who Plan to spray or dust crops either from the sir or the ground will ba given In the closing session of the course, A new stats law reoulres that they be licensed, . The nomadic Mlamao Indians of Nova Scotia favored portable wig warns of birch bark that could be folded and packed Into canoes. Interior Sea lies. The item announces that Bcarlt's proposed to hold a homing in Wus.i niRion this month on whuthrr or not to renew lor two years the lease uf 'lMtunu Farms on 3,314 acres M farm land includod in the Tulo Lake Rolugo. Then the article quoled the fol lowing dlrcctlvo from Seaiies: "Tho Bureau of Reclamation ahoulu ptirsuo imomatlcally oitnu- iisnccl oujccuvrs oi suutimtiiiw withtii'Bwn public lands Into units suitable lor homestead entry under reclamation law. The ensuing two years of this lease extension should be ullllned for appropriate measures Including additional con struction as needed lor protection from Inunchuion ol the maximum acrciiRa of utnp hinds so that they will be suitable for homesteadlng." That policy, carried out, would mean the rcmuvnl of approxi mately oiia-thlid of tho 30,01)0 ucro Lake Refuge, the diminution o the Tulo Lake publlu hunting area and the wiping out of tho entire area on which tho hundreds of thousands of geese which umj the relugo teed and lost. Actually the lease extension Is an incidental manor, but In tho words ol una olliciul, wni'ii uio policy liunood down by Brurlrs Is earned out, "I ho value of lule Lako Is shot tu hell." Gordon's letter reie.-s only to the Tula Luko sltuullon, but a very similar Munition lines the com panion Lower Klainalh Rcluitc, whore tho Fish and Wildllle Serv ice Is now enuimrd in a souo.oco development program because present Inclllllrs aro inadeqiiiile. Hie millions oi wutetiowl that uio Lower Klamulh euch year de pend for mast of their ieed on a .000-no o area known us Klnnmth Straits, lying Jum over the Oregon lino on the north boundary ol tho rclugj. Hie Reclamation Bureau, has been trying tor years to pry that Inoso so It cull bo subdivided and put Into row crop tracts. When that Is done, tho value of Lower Klamath will be destroyed Jur.t as much as will Tulo Lake under tho proposuls to cut out Its heart, ior when the fecdlne. area is destroyed water alono will not keep ducks In a refuge. In order to understand the full significance of these proposals. It Is necessary to understand that the key to the entire program of water-fowl refuges in the State of California for the feeding of wa terfowl provision of hunting area and prevention of crop depreda tion lies In the great fish and wild life refuges In Siskiyou County. If they aro destroyed most ot the value of the six million dollars worth of work done by California LAST TlMg TONIGHT! 1 v . ,' lmt union ii tff . JJarlind.Hoiv- Co ma you; Sgypn K I i MOO"0 If! JSGsVl 1 r1 sSfrg. 1 7tt7mii k i!3trSSOOi - ANNS FRANCIS N irl CHARLCS BICKF0RP-LUNDI6AN - FSfSSMW M ROBBERY! 1 V iSPlP1 EDGAR BUCHANAN . fm My Willi EXTRA ENTERTAINMENT "SNO TIME" (CARTOON) "THREE SMART BOYS" "RAILROAD SPECIAL AGENT" 'FLYING SKIS" (Sport) L,..t Pararnont NEWS and tho U.S. Fish and Wllilllie Bcrv. lea In tins initio will be Ijst. And became Citlllurnlu Is a '.rndllloiinl wluiciiiin pliica for inn'.y of the bi to 60 million I'uelllo Myaity birds, a loss here la bound to hurt the other Paoillo slates, Annually 10 lo l!l million ducks and iiocaa tino Lower Klumath and Tula Laka on tliolr way south, Willi out (ootl to hold thnin, those birds will sweep on Into the central val ley to feed tiff the farmer's crops, for tho. rntabllshod refuges can nut possibly hamlla tho rnllro pop ulation at one time. That was why Tula Lake and tower Klnnuith were established, why the, fish and wildllle service places some of its top men In chuino and why liyway Biologist Clint I.oslelter In chitigod with noili lug but working out ways to out down waterfowl crop damago. Information from Washington Is that Hcurlra has put off aetlng on tho Tulana Icaso until alter tho flr.st ot tho your. HELD fontlauous From TODAY Sm C STARTS THURSDAY MACDONAU) CAREY ALEXIS SMITH