11 Ghost Of Ash Creek Butte" Baffles Searchers lly WALLACE MVKflK "The Ghost of Ash Creek Butte" kept air search and ground rescue teams on tenterhooks all day yes terday at Municipal Airport. The "ghost," so dubbed last night by Joe Steele, a Klamath Air Search and Rescue leader, was believed to be tho wreckage of an Air Force transport missing In this area with eight men aboard since Dec. 20, The transport, a C-47, has not been heard from since It made a routine radio check with the air port hero at 4:17 p. m., Dec, 20. The radio communicator reported the ship flying at 10,000 fuet en routo to San Frunclsco from Spo kane. A Ikm r. I wero three crewmen and five "aerial hitchhikers," all service personnel. The plane was never heard from again after milk ing the radio check here. Air Force unci KASRU men searched for several days in what was be lieved to be the biggest aerial search In Northwest history but no trace of the plane was ever found. Two Air Force rescue teams and KASRU members act up a search and rescue base at the airport Saturday to look for a small cabin plane missing alnco Friday morn ing with four young Air National Guardsmen aboard. That search had a happy ending Sunday morn ing when three of the four lost men made their way out of the mountains north of McCloud. They had left the fourth man with their downed plane. He was sick and didn't feel up to battling the deep mow on foot. Soon after his com panions appeared at McCloud, a ski plane went In and brought out the fourth man. The four Guardsmen, en route lo their Sacramento homes In a char tered plane, a Cessna 170, had landed on a slope 14 miles north west of McCloud when their gas ran low and they were blinded by a driving snowstorm. Late Sunday afternoon, Paul Gemberllng was certain he saw the tall section and a good part of the rear fuselage of a C-47 sticking out of the snow. When he reported here, hopes were high that the Air Force C-47 carrying eight men, which vanished Dec. 26, had finally been found. Air Force and KASRU ground teams Immediately began prepara tions for tackling heavily snowed under mountain trails to Ash Creek Butte. But last night, after an Air Force ground Icam with a Weasel had already been dispatched to Mc Cloud and KA8RU had arranged to get a Copco "Sno-Cat" from Yre ka, the ground trip was called oil. The ground trek was called off btca" 'e several experienced aerial e vn who flew over Ash Creek Butte all day yesterday could find no trace of the C-47 tall section. Gemberllng was positive he had seen the tail section on the east slope of a Butte ridge at about 7,000 feet. Searchers yesterday even resort ed to aerial pictures of the ridge section designated by Gemberllng. The pictures were "blown up" by Herald and News photographer Don Kettler and studied under a powerful magnifying glass. But nothing even remotely resembling plane wreckage could be found. However, despite failure of the other filers and observers and lack of evidence in the pictures, Gem berllng wouldn't budge a fraction: "The plane's up there . , , No doubt about It . . , I saw it plain as the none on my face," he said. But to offset Gemberllng's assur ance there were the many hours of flight over the ridge yesterday that found nothing. Ed Scholer, ace KASRU flier, criss-crossed over the ridge several times. "I took a real good look all over that ridge , . ." I could see It good . . , I couldn't see anything at all like wreckage" he said. Meanwhile, Gemberllng, who flies for John Mifflin, owner of Uie Cess na in which the four National Guardsmen were lost, had taken off to fly the Cessna back to Spokane. Mifflin, however, was still here. Late yesterday afternoon, Mifflin took Lt. D. A. Fit7erald, Air Force rescue officer, and again flew over the Ash Creek ridge. When they returned they reported they had not seen any trace of possible wreckage. That did it. Capt. George Blair, of Hamilton Field, who had been commanding the Cessna search base here, conferred briefly with the KASRU men and announced the ground trek to Ash Creek was cancelled . . At least, for the time being. "There's no sense In risking oth er men's lives sending them Into those mountains unless vs're prac tlcally certain there something In there," said the captain. KASRU men readily agreed, But everyone. Including tills re porter who talked with Gemberllng at length about the wreckage he reported, was Impressed with Gemberllng's determined certainty ho had seen the C-47 tail section, "Shadows and rock formations do not fool me," said Gemberllng, "I know a plane when I see it and I saw that C-47 tall section," Could Oemberllng have been mistaken In the location , , . Was It some other ridge He wouldn't give ground there either, stoutly holding to the Ash Creek Butte lo cation. So there lt Is and there It' wilt probably remain until the summer thaw permits a possible close ground search of the ridge slope for . . . "The ghost of Ash Creek Butte. i V PARTNERS Pat Ball (left), 2530 Eberlinc Ave, and Lottlo Wright, 720 Lowell St., operate Jennie's Cafe, 910 Main St. la The lly FRANK JICNKINH In Washington tli in moriiliiK, Rep enentatlve Hcbni, ol Loulxlana a former Now Orleans newspaper idllor, by the way) charges that i "gigantic and columul propa tandii machine" of the armed orcrn linn turned on nil the (uucatn n mi attempt to "explain away Herbert's I committee's expou il wwiio In the rnllllnry." (Congress has been Investigating tliargcs Hint the military services os money around if tl were vsste paper. Representative He lerl Is n member ol the rommlt e that has been tspcnrhendtiiK tlu? nvestlgullon.) I have Immense respect (or eood inldlers, but I wouldn't be greatly lurprlned i( what Hrprescnuitlve leberl says Is true. We turn over o the armed services practically ill the money they ask (or. In the icrv nature o( things, we don't mention them too closely as to how ftcy spend II. Under such circuni donees, It would be strange Indeed ( colossal wiuite didn't develup In ill spending ol the money. Suppose you were Klven an tm lorlnnl ob to do. Buppoxe vou rre simply loaded down with noney lo tuy tho bills with. Sup jase you were practically told tlinl ' ao questions would bo anked as lo low you handled the upending, Isn't It ntillo possible. In Mich a lituntlon, that you might soon de velop habile o( extreme extrava iiince? Along that line, Representative Harris Ellsworth, ol the Southern Oregon district across the maun IuIiih, tells this one In Ills current newsletter: "Funny stories (not m lunny nt that) keep coming out ol tho com mlllees regarding military pur chasing. Now It Is learned that the nrmcd services speculations lor Fi.Y SWATTERS weigh 2', POUNDS and the book Is four Inches thick." As Harris says, Uiat Isn't so fun ny at that. We're preparing for what might develop into a struggle lor sur vival will) Russian communism. As n guide to use in buying FLY SWATTERS, our armed services prepare a book four Inches thick and weighing two and a hull pounds I Draw your own conclusions. Per tonally, this Is the only conclusion I can arrive at: Drawing up a set of sneclllcntlons like that to USE Diifslcws IN BUYING FLY SWATHES for the army nnd Uie navy and the air loroe Is a lot of tommyrot. SpeaKlng of government, this dis patch came out of Washington a few days ago: "During Iho current week, the government reported people living on farms received record Incomes lasl year (1061) but the flsuro still was 40 per cent below the aver age ol tho nnn-Inrm population. "Incomo from all sources ol per sons living on Inrms averaged H020 compared with $1707 lor ' lho.se living off Inrms. In the prev ious yoar 1 f)f0 the farm income overage was $820. per person and tho non-farm average was $1603 per person." I suppose you've heard the storv Hint the reason prices are so high is that the fnrmers are llvlnn the II Ic of Riley. Well, the. GOVERN MENT says the farmers are in (Continued on Page 8) m mi mi . mi ii ,r i - ; ', y I M. A. CARTER Cattle Shot In Try To Lick Disease REOJNA. Rnslc f r-,.,ll,. motilities went ,mtml,i TiiiHi, tor livestock Infected with dreaded iiuui-iimi-iiiouui disease as Canada took drastic action to nave her Iwn htlllmt Inllii. ulw.l ....... frm an outbreak of the mulady In Southern Saskatchewan. Tile United States, which got lis first hool-and-moulh lnfeHInn 1rmn Canada In 1B70. Immediately ban- iii-u uu bioc ana meat imports from ncross Uie norlliern border. This nlmierf trnrin In k.AHinn animals and meat which list year umwicu ijii munon dollars. The action followed announce ment Monday the disease had turned un nt 11 ft,rm huh mmi. clpallllea around Heglna. Mounted pouco began destroying lnlected animals, which federal au thorities said Included 1,015 cattle, 103 hogs and 140 sheep. . Rigid quarantine regulations were ellfnrreri tn ttrHnm II,-. Ai. sense til the Heiflnn rm IIih .nl.f section whero It has been found so lar, Olllcials mild they had good chance of wiping out tho discos on the spot. But In British Columbia, Pro vincial Livestock Commissioner W. R. Ounn said caltlo cars which lind rnrrleH lnrlfrl ..ntiln ...l,.t.t turn up In "Vancouver, Toronto or wiiuiiKo, ana mere might Be an outbreak anywhere." U. 8. Insneefnrii iilrinriv nr. nt work, tracking down all live onl- mius orougni into uie U.S. from Canadu in recent weeks. TtlCV Were tn hn wntihiH flnnntu for possible Infection. western caltlo trade In Saskatch ewan and Manitoba came to a virtual standstill. Allierln iiIIIa lr,irlnt olmol.. Drltlsh Columbia meat dealers said tney would probably seek supplies In Seattle II Alberta, their normal bource, was closed to them. Otllcllils In Vnnrnnvnr ,tlrt kniu. ever, any embargo on Alberta cat ilc would have to come from tho fcderul government. Western cattlemen In Edmonton predicted meat prices would drop because the import bnn bv the United States. Iho Canadian indus try's chiel export customer, would Hood locnl markets. Some anticipated the bnn would lust a venr, but many feared that rnmrrpfismnn frmn Tl fl ..nlll.. states would try to prolong tho ban iniiciiniieiy occnuso ol tne out break. Cnnnrllnn nffllnl ruth.) tn Washington lo nsk an easing of Uie shut-out. Ep!ey To Speak At Neb. Picnic Mnc Epley, former Hernld and News mnnnglng editor nnd now as sistant executive editor of the Long Beach Press-Telegram, Is to de liver an address nt the Nebraska Mld-Wlntcr Plcnlo at Long Bench, Mnrch 1. The picnic meotlng Is to mnrk the 85th anniversary of Nrbrnskn Admission Day. Epley Is a native of Nebraska. Ho was born at Broken Bow, where his fnUicr wns a minister. SC HOOL CLOSES v SALEM Wl Snlcm Acndcmy, a nrlvnte high school, closed Tucs- dny becnuse 85 of its 200 students were sick. PHIL HITCHCOCK KLAMATH FALLS, OltKGON, lank Jobber Spuds Lead List Of USBR Project Crops lly HALE HCARBKOLGII Crops grown on lnnd under the Klnmalb Reclamation project In Southern Oregon and Northern Cal ifornia In 1P51 were valued at $20. 110,030, according to the annual report of Richard L. Bokc. region al director of the Bureau of Recla mation, The value of livestock Is not In cluded in the estimate. Potatoes brought the biggest cash return, according to Boke'B figures. $11,248,148; barley $(,uib, 528; alfalfa hay $2,524,424; clover seed $2,147,457. The protect covers a part of Klamath County In Oregon and of Siskiyou and Modoc in California. The acreage within the protect cultivated during 1051 was 189.012, the report says, and during the year the Bureau delivered 272.070 acres ol water or about 100,000 acres of tho project; The remain ing acreage was watered by pump ing from sumps. Gross revenue to the project It self for 1051 was $954,714. which Included payments for operation and maintenance, water rental, lease rents, construction repay, ments and miscellaneous collec tions. Other highlights of Boke's report are; . Construction Fourteen construc tion projects were in progress dur ing Uie year at a cost of $532,814. The largest was the Lost River channel Improvement Job Planned construction for 1953 Is expected lo coat $751,097. It Includes com pletion of the Lost River Job, flood control work on Lost River In upper Langcll Valley, completion of pumping plants "R" and "8". com pletion of the second extension of the "N" canal area. complcUon of work on north main dike In the Tulelakc division, engineering stud ies on raising Clear Lake, and smaller Items. Future development Investlga- No Grog On Meter Blurbs Thero won't be any booze nd vcrUscmcnts on Klamath Falls' parking meters state liquor law would prohibit that Mayor Bob Thompson pointed out last night In the sole objection yet voiced to the city's plan to allow 5x7 inch advertising placards to be Installed on Its 748 meters. The objection came from the Union (WCTU) and the organiza tion also asked that tobacco ad vertising be banned. Mayor Thompson, who operates the .Pioneer Tobacco company. Joculorly said he "couldn't see any thing wrong wnn cigaret ana to bacco ads. but' that Uie selection of the advertising matter would be up to tho Ad-o-Metcr company, with which the city is about to sign a contract. Tho parking meter ads are sup posed to be national, with no locnl soliciting, and the city retains the right to screen it lor objectionable material. In return for allowlna the adver tisements on the parking meter standards, the city is supposed to get under terms of the contract, 60 cents a month per meter or $5,385.00 a yenr. The Ferndnlc, Mich., company is to post a $5,000 surety bond be fore the advertising goes in. Flnnl rending of the ordinance permitting the pnrklng meter ad vertising probably will come next Monday nignt. ' SLIDE TRAPS SIX VIENNA Wl An avalanche ronrlng down in the neighborhood of the Knprun power station in the Aiistrinn Alps Tuesday Ullcd six workers and Injured several others. Tho denths brought lo 40 the num ber ol dlsnstcr victims k.lled ;n the Austrian Alps this winter. D. E. VAN VACTOR TDKHIMV, FKBRUARY 26, 1952 In Value tlons are to be continued toward preparation of a plan lor maxi mum ure of land and water re sources of the Upper Klamath basin. A planning report should be finished in 1954. The Investigation, which involves the watershed of the Klamath Riv er above Copco Lake and Shasta and Scott Valleys in Calilornia, Is to cover power development, agri cultural potential, 41sh and wild life values and recreation. In addition to overall basin plan ning, plans for agricultural devel opment of Uie Klamath Straits area (the area which connects Lower Klamath with Klamath Riv er) are virtually complete, Boke's report says. Plans to homestead that nrea have been deferred pend ing further study of wildlife prob lems. A detailed study has been com pleted dealing with possible pro ject modifications to provide ad ditional water deliveries to lands not having an adequate supply, and to about 14,000 acres of land which Is above Uie gravity flow from present ditches and laterals. Power development The report says there are several good pos sibilities for power development on the Klamath River between Keno and Copco. at several dam sites on the Sprague. and possibly in connection with Uie proposed BuUe Vallev unit. Crop outlook Because of expect ed higher farm costs, a ehltt to higher per-icre Income crops ahd to more livestock is anticipated on the Klamath project. Boke says. An Increase of 10 to 15 per ceni in spud acreage, 15 to 20 per cent In alslkc clover, and 7 to 10 per cent In improved pasture Is fore seen. Barley and annua win de crease. Beef and sheep production Is ex pected to increase about 8 per cent while hogs and dairy animals prob ably will decrease about Uie same percentage, along with poultry. Enforcement Panel Slated For Tonight Problems of law enforcement In the Basin will be aired tonight at 30 p. m. over Station KFLW on the Jointly sponsored Herald and News KFLW "Build the Basin" panel discussion program. Usually heard on Monday nights, the program was shifted to Tues day to facilitate appearance of sev eral city government members. The topic slated for tonight's dis cussion is. "How Can We Better Support Our Law Enforcement Of ficials?" A panel of sevel experts In law enforcement in the Basin area gave their consent to appear on the program. Representing the city will be Mu nicipal juagc KODert tiuor arm Councilman Darrell Miller, chair man of the police commivse. Speaking for the overall county picture will be Dlst. Atty. D. E. Van Vactor. State Sen. Phil Hitchcock was picked to give the legislator's view point on law enforcement problems. E. J. Dlehl, superintendent of Klamath Agency on the Indian res ervation. Indicated he will discuss problems of law enforcement on the reservation. Others on the seven-man panel Incliile Sgt: Earl Tichenor of the Klamath Falls state police office and District Judge M. A. (Nick) Carter. As in past programs the pnnel will answer questions phoned to the Hernld and News 18111) during the program. KFLW Manager Burt Chandler will acL as moderator of the Dro- gram, scheduled to run for one nou. - l DARRELL MILLER 1 it XA. iMmiAk V 1 i XI II it . .Z 1 Vl--,. Telephone 8111 No. 2750 Nabbed Quick Work Scores For FBI Agents NEW YORK Of) An armed ex convict accused of a $19,628 Los Angeles bank robbery flew into New York Tuesday and was seized by Uie FBI within 15 hours after the crime. Agents said they trailed him through "bait money" taken In the holdup. Edward Scheldt, special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investiga tion, Identified the suspect as John Richard Bayless who had served time at Alcatraz prison for a Mans field, Mo., bank robbery. Scheldt said Bayless used money taken In the robbery to buy a Trans-World Airlines ticket to New York Part of It, the FBI said, was "bait money," the numerals of which had been recorded. Bank tellers were under instruc tions to pass over these bills along with other currency In the event of a holdup. The FBI said Bayless had about $2,000 of Uie bait money in his pos session when he was arrested. Bayless Is accused of entering the, Hollywood branch of the Bank of America. In Los-Angeles -,at 10:30-a.m. and, at the point of the Sun, laKUlg SiU. 628.61. He wns carrying a .38 caliber re volver In his belt and attempted to use it when he stepped of! Uie plane, Scheldt said. The FBI chief said Bayless had Uie gun partly out of his belt when agents who had been waiting at the top of the ramp, near Uie plane, seized him and pinned his arms to his side. Brilliant police work led to Bay less' quick arrest. He was already flying to New York before police learned that an airline reservation had been made for a man giving the name of Ben nett, an alias used by Bayless, and one in the name of Bayless. The Bennett reservation was cancelled. The Trans-World Airlines flight, which had made stops at Phoenix, Ariz.; Chicago and Dayton, Ohio, was already on Its. last leg to New York when the FBI was noUfled. The G-men contacted Uie airline and Bayless' description was ra dioed to Uie plane as it flew over Pittsburgh an hour out of New York. The pilot. Capt. B. K. Stuessl, 37, of Kansas City, Mo., passed the word to the hostess, Jeri Starr, 21, of Kansas City. She spotted Uie passenger in seat No. 6 and gave a description of him to the captain. The plane then was only 20 min utes out of La Guardia field and the hostess had instructed passen gers to fasten their seat belts lor a landing. The decriptlon of tne man in seat No. 6 was radioed to the FBI and double checked. When the plane put down the G men were waiting. Scneldt.sald aayiess was com mitted to Alcatraz in 1938 from the the federal penintenUary at Leav enworth, Kas., in 1951, and released last August. Monday's robbery was commit ted by a cool, conservatively dressed man who walked Into Man ager Gilbert R. Fox's office, waited for him to finish a telephone call, then pulled n gun and said: "Okny, stnrt filling this brief case." The bandit forced Fox to enter each of six teller's cages and put money from them into the brief case. Then he slipped out of Uie bnnk nnd fled in an nutomeoue. A witness caught the license num ber of the robber's car. The auto mobile was found later nenr the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. Police said the car was Durchased in Wichita, Kns., by a mnn using the nnme of John R. Bennett E. J. DIEHL I ' ! ' Vi s--".. " ' : 5 - :t $r ' ' Ii "11' Jf' " ' CONFLICTING STORIES were told police this morning con cerning the stabbing of a Mexican in the small cabin at 1204 Adams St: Held for investigation of murder, are James Godowa (left) in plaid jacket and Lorenzo Weeks. Addition Of Flourides To Klamath Water "Probable" By HALE SCARBROUGH The addition of fluorides to Klam ath Falls' drinking water could be started in a couplo of momiis. Glenn Bowen, manager of the Ore gon Water Corporation, said today, Red Cross To Open Drive "Do's nd Don'ts" of soliciting funds foV the 1952 Red Cross drive will top off tomorrow's kickoff cof fee hour at Uie Willard hotel, 10 a.m., being held for all Red Cross board members, and fund drive workers. The "Do's and Don'ts" Is a skit, and will be performed by local members. The affair will cost those attend ing 25 cents, and serving will be done by Uie Volunteer Services Canteen girls. Materials and kits for drive workers will be distributed during the session, according to Exec Secy. Virginia Dixon. Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern California: Considerable cloudiness today and tonight, partly eloudy tomorrow. High todav 43, low tonight 29. High Wednesday 45. , High temp yesterday 35 Low last night 25 Preclp Feb. 25 .- 0 Since Oct. 1 12.77 Normal for period 7.97 same period last year 11.88 FAIR SALEM l.f The condition of ex-Gov. Walter M. Pierce. 80, con tinued fair Tuesday, Salem Me morial Hospital said. SGT. EARL TICHENOR but won't until Uie compnny is sure Uie public wants lt and approval of aU the agencies involved is giv en. Dr. M. E. Coope. dentist and chairman of a coi.iinitiee appoint ed by Mayor Bob Thompson to study" water fluoridation here, re ported to the City Council last night the committee's recommen dation was to go ahead, and soon. The Council probably ' will pass a resolution in the next week or two, dlreclin-j the water company to add fluorides. The County Healih Department probably will do the same. Medical nnd Dental associations have already endorsed Uie principle of f luor, cia'.ion Bowen said he and the water company are strictly on the fence about it, that the company wants assurance of the public and of all agencies having any say in Uie matter, including Uie State Board of Health, before Uie step will be taken. If fluorides are- added to the water, it will be for the whole sys tem, not Just for the city. Some time ago Bowen estimated that about a $6,000 a year outlay would be necessary for Uie com pany to turn to fluoridation, but that it probably wouldn't lead to an increase in water rates. The process is simple, Bowen said, and the company could be set up for fluoridation in a couple oi months. Injection of fluorides Into ' drink ing water has been proven to les sen tooth decay among children, and a number of communities are doing it. But there are objections. There is always Uie possibility that there could be some backfire and harmful result, and it amounts to mass medication, which might be found objectionable by many peo ple. Tests of Klamath Falls water show presence of about .3 natural flourides to a million parts of wa ter, and a presence of around 1.2 parts to a million is considered aDout rignt lor tne purpose oi les sening tooth decay. JUDGE ROBERT ELDER Man Knifed To Death In Cabin Here A Mexican was stabbed to death sometime early this morning in a ramshackle cabin on Adams street and three Indians are held at the city Jail for investigation. The dead man was Identified as Miguel Tenols Maurlcio, possibly a transient. Booked at the city Jail for in vestigation of murder are Lorenzo Weeks, 35, of Beatty, and James Godowa, 35, of Beatty. An Indian woman, Lolana Crane, SO, also of Beatty, Is held as a material wit ness. Police and District Attorney D. E. Van Vactor at noon today had not been able to learn much about how Maurlcio came to his death, except that he was stabbed in the chest with a large kitchen knife. Apparently a drinking party had been in progress at the cabin. Sev eral near-empty wine jugs and beer bottles were found in the place, police said, and Weeks and Godowa, old customers at the jail, were intoxicated wnen orougni in. The cabin. 1204 Adacyt and one of several owned by Mrs. Dora Herrera, was rented to an Indian woman, Mrs, Pearl Ray. She moved in Feb. 6. Charlie Ward, an OH student, manages the cabins for Mrs. Herrera and lives at 1200 Adams. About 5 o'clock this morning, ac cording to police, one of the In dians, either Godowa pr Weeks, went to Ward's place, told him there was a dead man In 1204 and that he should call the police. Patrolman John Rlzzo went to Uie cabin and found Mauricio's body on a bloodsoaked mattress on the kitchen floor of the cabin. The man was dead. None of the Indi ans would admit knowing anything aoout ii. . Weeks, Godowa and Mrs. Crane were taken to jail and Mrs, Ray, who has a baby, was left at the cabin. Her 12-year-old son, Arlan Jackson, was taken to the District Attorney's office for questioning. About Mid-morning Mrs. Ray and the baby disappeared. Officer Rizzo said he found a large knife that might have been used In the stabbing. It was on the kitchen stove and apparently had been washed with soapy water. Weather Halts Air Attacks By MILO FARNETI SEOUL, Korea tn Allied air men sat out the slowed-down Ko rean War Monday. The weathei stopped aerial strikes against the Reds for the first time since Christ mas. Only vweather reconnaissance planes took off Tuesday morning They looked for holes In the snowy overcast hanging above the Korean hills. Fifth Air Force pilots flew only 14 sorties Tuesday the lowest number in two months. Weather stymied all Fifth Air Force night fighters Monday night Only 217 sorUes about 1-3 nor malwere flown by the Fifth Air Force In daylight Monday. The planes cut Communist rail lines in 15 spots and destroyed 27 supply buildings and 190 vehicles. Two days earner, 772 sorties mast ed Red rails in 143" places. Ground action was almost at a standstill Monday. Eighth Army headquarters reported a few light patrol actions and some artillery fire., - House Number Law Invoked Some people In Klamath Falls, says City Engineer Taxi Thomas aren't putting street numbers on their houses, and he wants to gel the law after 'em. There is a law a city ordinance adopted Feb. 8, 1926, which says numbers shall be placed on house! and provides a fine of from $5 to sio for non-compliance. But there hasn't been a prose cution under that law since . . . well, since the recollection of the eldest citizen runneth not to the contrary. Maybe there has never been one. However, Thomas says some res idents, and some businesses, out in Uie S. 6th area don't have house numbers and won't put them up. They apparently get their mall, Thomas says, in Post Office boxes and avoid bill collectors and the like by not having noticeable street addresses. He has asked, and Mayor Bob Thompson has promised, prosecu tion to tne iuiie.it extent or tne law for these malefactors. . No house numbers, eh? No bill collectors? Hm-m- ... 8IIEEPHERDERS WASHINGTON Wl The Senate Monday .passed and sent to the House a bill which Would permit Importation of skilled alien sheep herders. Up to 600 special 1mm sratlon permits would be authorized to im nort sheenherders providing per manent employment Is offered.