DPS Premises FmsI FigK il if. if 8 tais! Had Iwd "lit i 7 i'. r. r 1 Here 4 f I tf?. I A n i -si ... lmuk FRONTLINE VISIT Lt. Gen. James Van Fleet (left) visits the 40tli National Guard Division headquarters somewhere along tho front in Korea. Showing the general around are MaJ. Gen. Hudelscn, 40lh commander (center) and Brig. Gen. Willard Wyman, commanding officer of the IX Corps. Nolo tho flag in background at half mast in honor of King George VI. Yonna and Swan Lake I Water Rights Curbed ny hale 8CAiinnoi (iii Tho Slate Engineer's office hns l i iiiirti unit hi ma innuiiiiip ut 1 ? permits (or tine ol underground fi water ef Yonnn Valley mid Swim ' Luke Valley lur irrigation, t. ' Charles E. Blrlcklln, State En r plnccr, announced that no iimir . underground water right in those fi , regions will be approved unlil n I Nlucly of tlio supply ol Uip water Is : 1'OllipHUCd. At present, by lornl estimate. ny FRANK JP.NKINH In Culifnrnlii. where these words me written, there nre two sub- UiTJic . 1 1111 4 .' J Jerla ol mnjor convcrnatlon ram- ; lull nnd politics. As to the first, water Is running out of California's enrs. In the nnrlli, every little crrfk Is a rush ing lllllo river. Water stiuids In every low plncc In the flallands. Going Into Sacramento, the Yolo by-pasa looks like Snn Francisco buy. And so on nil down through Uip Hun Jonnuin Vulley. Tliere H wnier everywhere you look. South of tho Tchaehnpl, tho molv fure u.n'1 so nppnrenl to tho eye, nllhough they've hnd rainfall thnt In any other recent your would have seemed staggering. In many prla of the Southland, the prcclpl tnllon so lur In this current stream yenr hns reached 18 Inches. Rivers I hut have, been dry so long Unit their dusty beds have come to be accepted as tho regular thing are now currying Rood-sized flows of water inward tho aca. Tho ancient tale about the guy who became so bored with life that, he Is alleged to have said, he would have Jumped Into the Los Angeles river and ended It all If he hadn't hated to pet his new suit alt over dust wouldn't get even a chuckle this year, for water Is actually flowing In the bed of It. Up In the Santa Clara valley, where water has been a burning subject for many, many long dry years, the water table Is beginning to rise rapidly. It Is asserted on good authority that It Is already l& back to halt the normal height of .E -.V.-.. kk n l.,ln11 ,,,. garden" as normal, and Is .still rl.v lug which is causing the smiles on Uie faces of pump Irrigations to spread clear around behind their ears. Old timers, questioned on the subject of current rainfall, shrug their shoulders deprecallngly and aver that nhucksl this Isn't any thing at all. Why, they say, you should have seen It when lt really used to rain down here. They relate thot away back In 1016 there was n rain that really wa a rain. One of tho main bridges on the Santa Ana river, they chortle, was so thoroughly ."ashed out In a minor cloudburst . lat no single trace of It was ever seen again. Searching parties wcro sent out to look for the wreckage, but no dice. Not so much as A splinter of It was ever found, Thcv then go on to tell you that tho same year, over In the up per end of the Imperial valley, 20 miles oi raurona true nuncim the same fate. Not even the rails turned up. They are supposed to have been burled In the sand washed down by the BWlrllng wa ters, I hope thnt story Is told over and over and over agnln down here this winter. We'll remind them of It If as nnd when they start making sheep eyes at OUR water. As to the political tnlk, lt Is nil on the Presldcntinl side, so fnr. Thcro Is plenty of lt. Bo fnr, at least In the plnccs where I've lis tened, It Is free from rnncor. It Is lnigcly on tho Republican side, ns lt seems to be tnken for grunt ed thnt Truman will either run himself or will dlctnte his succes sor. There Is nlmoslno tnlk AOAINST any of the four Republicans whose candidacies have been more or less formally launched. Thnt Is to sny, people tell rather freely why tly nto for whomever thoy are for, but nprond no poison about the others. You henr lt widely snld thnt nny one of tho four would mnko a good President. Thcro Is plenty of backing In California ns thcro should be for Oovornor Warren, but thoro is also n lot of outspoken talk for General Elsenhower. Ho seems to com mnnd, In Cnllfornla, as elsewhere, the faith and the confidence and tho trust of In rue numbers of peo ple. Senator Tnft hns a large fol lowing in nil the casunl talk one hears. There is little mention of Slassetli , , 'A there are about 00 wells In the two valleys cither producing water or fur which permits have been grunted, and llic-v huve turned sagebrush land Into some of the must productive iillullii. grain and rotiilo cropland in the Klamath lliisin. Yonna Valley particularly Is where the development and use ul underground water III this area has been pioneered. 'Die first well lor that purpose was brought In back In 1041. on the F. M. Chains plncc. TOTAL A RICA As of this week the total nren Included In permit lur use of un derground water In Yonna Valley watt 7,-jii acres, and In Swan I.uke Valley the total Is 6.101) acres. For the past three years the ground water division of the U.S. Geological Burvey nnd Btrlcklln's nlllce have been conducting investi gations and studies of underground water of the valleys, and data now available Indicates that pre cipitation each year puts Into the ground reservoir about the amount (or maybe less I than Is taken out now under the existing permit. The survey figures that two Inches of precipitation each yenr filters down through the soil to reach the ground water table, nnd that precipitation puts about 10.000 acre feet In underground storage for Swnn Lake Vallev and about 13,000 acre feet for Yonna Volley above the florsclly Irrigation Dis trict. Sl'ITLIKS Thn estimate, 'therefore, figuring an allowance of two feel per aero irrigated, charts the Swan Lake water table (Including Pine Flotl as able to supply water for 6.00C acres, and Unit of Yonna able to supply wuter for 6.&00 acres. Ex isting permits already exceed Uiose f'gurca. These, figures, Btrlcklm points out, are rough estimates so far, and subject to change when more accurate data la secured. But bused on Uie estimate, the Stale Engineer's oil Ice has adopt ed a policy of approving no more applications for appropriation of underground water In the two areas unless furUier studies show there is more water available for use. It may be that Uie valleys have underground water sources other than the annual local precipitation, but In the estimates quoted above Just the precipitation is taken into consideration. The decision to curtail water rights In Yonna and Swan Lake undoubtedly will have considerable ollcct on the agricultural develop ment of the areas, and that de velopment in Uie past few years has been phenomenal. Very tew of the wells now oper ating have to lilt water more than a hundred feet, and some consid erably less. One of the deepest (on the Haskins place In Yonna Valley i was put down 985 feet, but the water rose to 43 foct. The deepest In Swan Lake Is reported lo be a well on the Hanklns place, 600 feet. The water tapped by these wells for tho most part seems . to bed In red or black cinders or washed gravel, nflcr passing through n couple of lnva layers. But the Han klns well found water In sand. INFORMATION Tie State Engineer's office Is seeking ns much Information as obtainable about wells and water levels in tho two valleys to further the survey, and logs are being kept on all tho wells now working. In the snme connection, a com mittee composed of Arthur W. Pip er, U.S. Geological Survey, chair man: K. J. O'Connell, Eugene: A. C. Yaden, Klamath Falls; Dr. W. L. Powers. Corvnllis. and Charles Edwards, Eugene, is also studying underground wntcr In view of drawing up a state-wide underground water code. Such a code Is In existence in Eastern Oregon, but Uiere la none for the Western part of the state. Curve Quips Bring Danger LAS VEOAS, Nov. Wl Quips by Comedian Ben Blue about Jane Russoll's celebrated curves almost caused him to bo tossed behind his own gonl line by her hubby, Foot bnll Stnr Bob Wntcrfleld. Blue invited the nctrcss Bnd her husband to be his guests at a night spot Sunday, but during the show singled her out for some gngs that angered Waterflcld, quarterback on Uie pro championship team, the Los Angeles Rams. One report said Waterflcld stalked Blue after the show, grab bed hhn by his coat lapels and threatened to smash him to Uie floor, but Blue and Miss Russell later denied this. Waterflcld could not-be reached' for comment. UMT Action Blasted By Churchmen WASHfNOTON (f,siahing at cks on universal military trc' tucks lug uy leaders of church g leu unairnuin Kuwiell, D-r Uie Senate Armed Bervlc, JKm. mlttee ns ho put It "franlf 2led" Wedncsduy. Most church witnesses bitterly assail the proposal to compel 18 year olds to take six months' basic military training but nny they are willing lo go along with tho Se lective service draft for several more years. HOPE Russell Is a sponsor of the UMT measure. He hopes It eventually cun replace the draft by building up a vast reservoir of trained man power In the reserves. The committee chairman told several witnesses Tuesday he could not understand why lliey support the dralt and oppose UMT. He noted that the drufl Is under complete military control, that It takes men down to 18 2 lor two years actual duly that may In clude combat and then puts them in the reserve for another six years. On the other hand, Russell said UMT would be carefully super vised by a flve-mnn commission. under civilian control, would re quire only mx months' service in itially and this under special safe guards for morals and welfare. 1 HKAItlNtiS Public hearings on UMT contin ue Wednesday with spokesmen for several veterans organizations ex pected to support UMT. Borne oi tne witnesses in oppos ing UMT Tuesday struck out at government leaders, Uie Pentagon and the Congress. Mrs. Branson Gilbert Mcllwee, a Winchester, Va., grandmother, testified that President Truman and Secretary of State Achesou "should be behind bars." "You senators should Impeach President Truman and remove Sec retary Achcson." she said, adding that Gen. MncArthur should be ap pointed President. POW Exchange MUNSAN. Korea Wl Allied ne gotiators Wednesday accepted a 60 dny limit on exchanging prisoners and offered to compromise their demands for supervising a Korean truce. The Communists had proposed the 60-day limit. The exchange pe riod is to start when an armistice is signed. The agreement does not touch the key question ol voluntary repatriation. The United Nations Command, holding 133,000 prisoners, bad want ed 30 days more than was allowed the Reds to complete the exchange. Tne Kcds list only H.asa men in Red POW camps. Allied staff officers negotiating details for supervising a truce of fered a two-point compromise: If Communists agree to rotating 40,000 troops a month in addition to men on temporary leave, tne Al lies will drop two demands the Reds oppose. One of these would ioroid smil ing troops during a truce In a man ner that could constitute an of fensive thrent. Tile oUier would re quire weekly reports on the loca tion of nil major military units. Reds orlglnnlly agreed to rotnt ing 8.000 men monthly. They have incrensed this to 30.000. Allies orlg lnnlly asked 15.000 including men on rest and recuperation leave to Japan. Alpine Snow Deaths Mount VIENNA, Austrln W Austria's four dav death toll from alpine avalanches mounted to 26 Wednes- dnv. Lntest victims were three children nnd n British skier. The bodies of the three children, two boys aged 4 and 6 and a 12- vear-old girl, were dug out of the snow at Lcutasch, northwest of Innsbruck. They were trapped In their home when a huge avalanche roared down 5,500 foot high Gchrenspitze Mountnln. The British skier, Albert Thomas Hnrgreave, was killed at Obcr-gurg- Two compnnlons, also British, were buried but were rescued. Police said tho three went for a ski tour on the Muthspltze Moun tain despite warnings of danger from avalanches. . New snows were causing the nvalnnchcs. Communications in the mountnln a reus wns virtually at a standstill. International trains were running up to seven hours late, some places. Weather FORECAST: Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern California- Fair through Thursday. High Wed nesday 41. Low Wednesday night 15. High Thursday 45. High temp yesterday 30 i.ow last night e Precipitation Feb. 12 .02 Since Oct. 1 11.48 Normal for period 7.31 Same period last yr ...11,71 (Additional Weather en Page 4) 1111 ij ---ir prce ju Pates KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1952 Telephone 8111 No. 2739 e ne TUC Krili IVnlnnm. A.rlitinn Monlinu Pnm. I . y, V T I III, TIVUHI U!llll;W Wationai Guard, appeared at the Armory yesterday JtPi. ....... ., ' - ,r ,i V mhti f'nl rhnrlps Fpronsnn Charles II. DcBolt and Sgt. Glen LaMeres. (Back row, left to right) 1st Lt. William Tyccr, 1st. Lt. Jack E. Smith and 1st Lt. Walter Risse.. L - -w 414 Give Red Cross Blood Yesterday, the second In a two day run of the Red Cross blood mobile here, duplicated Monday in its take of blood 207 pints. The total collection, scheduled to cover both January and 'February! blood quotas, totaled 414 pints of blood, and fell short or the goal of 225 pints set for each day. The mobile blood unit could not complete Its January schedule here oecause of bad weather. According to Mrs. Virginia Dixon. executive secretary of the Red Cross' Klamath County Chapter, many early appointments were can celled for this week's donations be cause of the flu. Donors from throughout the basin area, including many from Tule- lake, offered blood at the armory. Tax Return Errors High A sampling of returns made by the State Tax Commission Indicates Uiat maybe as many as 80 per cent of the personal property taxpayers in Klamath County are making in correct reports, according to an nouncement today oy Otis Meisxer, Klnmath County Assessor. In particular, some reporting merchandise stock-in-trade for tax ation r.re not reporting the full value of their property for this year's assessment, lie said. Reports are supposed to show 100 per cent value of the personal pro perty, but Uie Tax Commission sampling of returns has showed a varintion of from the full 100 per cent down to 4 per cent of true value. Mctsker urges every taxpayer who has filed a faulty or Incor rect personal property return to get nn amended one In before the March 2 deadline. The lnw requires every person, firm cnrnorntlon or nssocintlon owning or having possession of tax able personal property 10 mime return, with an affidavit of .affir mation of its truthfulness. The law also provides a $10 a dav fine for failure to mnke a re turn with Intent to evade taxation, nnd prosecution for perjury for in tentional fnlslllcation of a return. Taft Denies Morse Pact BieATrr.ii! Wn Sen. Robert A. Taft, R-Ohio, has denied that he promised to help Sen. Wayne Morse. R-Ore., get a seat on the Senate Foreign Relations Commit tec. "T nAwpr mnde nnv such com mitment to Senator, Morse," Toft said when questioned at a news conference here Tuesday. Mnrse. when he wns nttemptlng to get the post created by the denth or Sen. Artnur vannenuem, Mich., snld Taft hnd onco agreed to help him get lt. The post went to another senator. " ftARDKN CLUB MERRILL A special dnte has been set lor the February meet inn of the Lost River Garden Club, Friday afternoon, Feb. 22, at the home of Mrs. Dale West. Mrs. Walter Fotheringham will be the co-hostess. Francis Smith of Klanv ath Falls will glvo an outside denv onstratlon of pruning, and all mem bcrs are urged to attend. 1st I.t flprald Pierce. Set. City Limit Extension Next on Radio Forum Pak Tickets 'On the House' Most everyone who has gotten a meter ticket for overtime park ing has dreamed of Uie day he or she could take it to the Police Station and tear it up In front of the desk officer. Well, that dream has come true for 17 Klamathitcs who paid over Ume citations yesterday. And those 17 can thank Abra ham Lincoln for having his birth day on Feb. 12. Apparently forgetting yesterday was a legal holiday, the Police Department yesterday Issued some 75 overtime parking tickets. Seventeen persons dutifully went to the police station yesterday and paid their parking fines. now, soys Mayor boo inompson, those people have a free ticket coming "on the house" , . Next time they get a ticket, they won't have to pay a fine. Those who received tickets yes terday and still have them should take or mail them to the police station at once so the tickets can be cancelled. Three Jailed For Vagrancy Two women nnd a man, arrested by City Police Monday, on vag rancy charges, each got 30-day jail terms in Municipal Court this morning. They were Identified by Police as Evelyn Mne Walker, 23, and Dorothy L. Sceman, 18, both from Kenton, Ore., and Ray Thomas Yon, 27, Holly Hotel. Officers said the vagrancy charg es arose from abortive attempts by the two women to pass a check at J.u. Penney Co. Police said the women admitted attempting to pass a check, and had disposed of it when they were unsuccessful. The women and Yon had come here over Uie weekend from Port land with two runaway Juvenile boys they met in Portland. The boys, now In juvenile cus tody, had taken off from Seattle and were bound for California when they met the trio in Port land. The youths are being held till their parents come here from Seat Ue to claim them. Taft Oregon Visit Brief PORTLAND liTI Sen. Robert A. Tnft of Ohio snld Wedncsdny thnt brief nppenrances In Portland and Pendleton likely will be the only campaigning he will do In Ore gon for the Republican presidential nomination. The Senator did not close the door completely on another Oregon appearance: "If my friends file my name In ihe primary," he said, "I will con fer with them before deciding final ly -upon a campaign." krf' By WALLACE MYERS Next Monday evening's Build Ihe Basin toning offered by. Uie Herald nnd News and its radio station. KFLW, throws the pub licity spotlight on a subject of top importance and interest . . . The topic for discussion is "Should Klamath Falls corporate limits be extended to include principal sub- uros, uiereoy increasing uie city population by some 10.000 people?" Because of Uie many facets of the subject, unusual care is being exercised in the selection of a panel Persons are being invited primar ily on the qualifications of geo graphy and specialized knowledge. The panel is to be evenly divided between suburbanites and city rest dents; and an attempt is Facing made to have persons wh can talk with authority on such perti nent matters as schools, sanita tion, taxes, insurance, municipal facilities and psychology. MOOT POINT The last point, psychology, ap pears strange but it could be a very important factor in enlarg' ing the city s population. The 1950 census showed Klam ath Falls to have an official count of 15.815 residents, a decrease from 1940's total of 16.496. On the lecord, it appeared the city was one of the very few municipalities in Uie Northwest that had lost pop ulation in that 10-year period. Such an announcement must have had a depressing effect on many and could understandably cause poten tial new business to shie away from the city. However, a few persons who have studied the matter, are aware oi the fact that Uie city has only been a victim ol a suburban move ment . . . that the purchasing and labor power is still here but many residents have moved outside the city limits. For instance, the official census listed the Altamont district alone as having n population of 9,419, making it Oregon's largest unin corporated area. The addition of 10.000 people to Klamath Falls would make the city the state's fourth largest, follow ing Portland, Salem and Eugene in thnt order. At present, Klam ath Fulls Is rated sixth, behind both Medford (17,305) and Corval lls (16,207). The additional 10.000 would show Klamath Falls at about 26.000. far ahead of Medford and Corvallis. On the record thnt would look good and should hnve a healthy psychological value, OPPOSITION But there are no doubt many suburbanites strongly against be ing inside the city limits. A popular objection will probably be that lt will be more expensive because of city taxes. However, it could be lhat insurance rates and the press ing demand for additional munici pal facilities in the suburbs would more than offset city tax expenses. That's what the Mdnday evening forum will attempt to explore . . . lhat and the many more angles of the subject. Broadcast time, as usual, will be 0:30 until 9:30 or 10 p.m., ns the public requests. STINGING REBUKE ROME Wl Pro-Fascist students during a lecture at Rome Univer sity by Prof. Umberto Calosso. The classroom emptied quickly. Calos so, who spoke for Italy from BBC studios in London during World War II. hns been under attack by pro-Fascist students for some time. Late last month he was smeared with red paint while leaving the university. Reds Prowl As Korean Air Warms SEOUL, Korea Wl A light touch of spring hit Korea's Eastern front Wednesday along with prob uig Communist Infantrymen. The mild weather was continuing and a thaw was starting. A Red company of about 160 men pounded an Allied advance position west of the Mundung val ley on the Eastern Front for 10 hours Tuesday night and Wednes day morning. The Allies withdrew on order about dawn but reoccupied the position four hours later against no opposition and found 12 Com munist dead. NO ATTACK Allied troops spotted about 200 Reds in the Mundung valley, but the Communists did not attack. In the same area Tuesday U.N. sold iers killed 96 Reds and wounded 130. U.S. Fifth Air Force warplanes cut Communist rail lines in 35 places Wednesday morning. Pilots also reported destruction of two locomotives and one Red anti-aircraft position. Nine B-29 SuperforLs bombed the Sunchon south bypass rail bridge Tuesday night. Three other B-21s hit the rail yards at Samdong and one raided the Kyomipo steel mill. Allied fighters and bombers at tacked 100 Red trucks Tuesday night and destroyed 9. Pilots also reported a string of 16 box cars destroyed in Northwest Korea. U.N. warships pounded road and rail networks off the East Coast. At Hungnam, the destroyer USS Halsey Powell worked over rail yards, rail and highway Junctions and a nitrogen plant with five inch shells. The destroyer USS Twining fired night and day at targets around Wonsan. Vandenberg, Carter Away Justice around Uie County Court house is on a temporary basis this week. To start with. Circuit Judge David R. Vandenberg is in Port land for two weeks on assignments made bv the Supreme Court for Multnomah County circuit courts. Ordinarily in Judge Vandenberg's absence orders concerning Circuit Court business are signed by Dis trict Judge M. A. (Nick) carter. But even that situation is on a substitute basis, since Judge Car ter is in Eugene attending a traffic conference. So Circuit court orders usually signed by the District Judge in ab sence of the Circuit Judge are this week signed by the "District Judge protemps" in absence of the Dis trict Judge in absence of the Cir cuit Judge. District Judge protemps in ab sence of Judge Carter is Ben God .4ni.,j oHnmv fl;ncinteri with the law lirm of xarrens ana jhuawcu. I .if f X?. ' ' M J& ON THEIR WAY to see a physician (a check-up for Fred) this morning were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohler, 1507 Sum mers Lane. All Potato Shipments Investigated The Office of Price Stabilization has investigators in the Klamath area now and will keep them here until the office Is satisfied there Is no further need for on-the-spot enforcement of OPS cell Ing price regulations on potatoes, Willis West, chief enforcement of ficer of the Portland OPS district said today. Since the Portland office's Juris diction extends only to the state line, West said the Sacramento OPS office also has Investigators here handling the Northern Califor nia phase of what has been termed a black market in spuds. West said that there have "ap parently been some abnormal prac tices" In connection with shipment of potatoes from the Klamath Falls area. Every carload shipped out Is be ing checked from the origin to the destination now, he said. SUSPICION The "abnormal practices" are suspected, he said, when one ship per is able to get spuds and an other isn't. West said the OPS was "in the dark as to what was going on here but that there seemed to be some shipments going out without actual billing, making it difficult to determine what price is being paid for the potatoes. Potatoes have been under price ceiling since Jan. 19. February base price here is 13.85 lor U. S. No. 1 two-inch minimum, less 30 cents for sacks if supplied by the ship per, and 20 cents more for washed spuds. Before the ceiling price was an nounced, potatoes were going for considerably more. SHIPPER ONLY The price celling is not on the grower but on the shipper, unless the grower happens to do bis own shipping. The shipper is allowed a 16 cent margin. Suspected infringments of the OPS regulations are at the shipper level and on down to the market. Most of the potatoes shipped from here go into California mar kets. West said the OPS Is going to insist on regular billing for po tatoes shipped, giving the name of the buyer and seller, description and price paid. If honest records' are kept, he declared, any violations of the ceil ing price will show up. If honest records aren't kept, the, Investi gators will have to dig. "We Intend to be fair In the In vestigation," West said, "and we hope the Klamath Falls situation will clear itself up." OTHER AREAS He also said there had been only a few minor complaints from the Bend-Redmond area, also a big spud-shipping center. Yesterday Twin Falls, Ida., along with Klam ath FaUs was pointed out as a center of black market acUvities. The OPS law provides for pos sible Jail sentence of up to a year and $1,000 fine for criminal and intentional infringement of the reg ulations, as well as recovery of treble damages in civil action. In correct practices could be halted by federal court Injunction, West said. NEW POSTMASTERS WASHINGTON Wl The Senate has approved the following nomi nations for postmasterships in Ore gon: Arthur B. Scarseth, Camp White; Charles W. Garlic, Glad stone: Vella A. Harlan, McNary; Russell F. Cooper, Sutherlin.