Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 26, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX -
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1052
FRANK JENKINS
jfcjltOT
t
I Entered ai second class matter at the post office ot Klamath Falls, Ore,
f : on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879
t , MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
ot n! the local news printed in this newspaper as veil as all At" ucwi
. SUBSCRIPTION RATES
S months 6.50 By Mall ...
Bjr. Mail
SMoakd
' ' .By BILL JENKINS
; There will bo great rejoicing in
' the state today.
t There will also be heard the wolf
1 howls of victory, the clinking of
; glasses and Uio general uproar
, that goes, vfith'any celebration of
"veterans..
The bonus Is-gonna be paid. Ain't
It grand?.. .
Let' us hope -that there is the
same sound oi rejoicing about nex
tax time when the state has to
settle down to the task of piunHng
up $55 million to foot the bill.
It's a nice theory but that ts-4
far as it goes. ,It amounts to pet
ting paid twice for the same Job.
The veteran was paid for his time
in the service and is now being
paid again. And the funny part of
it is that he was. and is. beiiii;
paid merely for doing his duty.
Every time we seem to be mak
ing a little headway something
touches off the voters again and
they go on a wild spree of. trying1
to spend themselves rich.
At least let's hope that we can
get this one paid off before the
people of Oregon vote in a bonus
lor World War Three. Having to
pav two at once would be quite a
By DEB ADDISON
This started out yesterday to tell
you about the state high school
basketball tournament at Eugene.
After mentioning that we didn't gel
there in time to see the Pelicans
play It degeneratol into an ac
count of the 25th reunion of some
has-beens whom you never heard
of before and probably never will
gain.
Now for the tournament.
The Old Champs (and that's
spelled with an "a", friend) from
the vantage point of the back row
of the grandstand devised the strat
egy of bow .to beat Swede Halbrook
and his Lincoln mates.
Nobody took our advice, so the
Tower made 51 points and Hal
brook li Co. are the New Champs.
Here's the way we did It.
On offense, we beat Halbrook
down the court whenever we could.
That accounted for some points.
When he got under the bask't
first with his helicopter arms de
fending it, we took our shots from
out behind then- defense.
It was easier to take those opn,
set, long shots than to try and
come up through the Halbrook tent.
We made most of these (you knew
how to pot 'em from center in our
day) and that accounted for some
jnore points.
v And on these long shots, we fol
lowed in like crazy. In our enthus
iasm to boom in and get the. ball
we mussed the Swede up a little
and had a few fouls called on us,
but ft upset the pattern of Hal
brook li Co. and the tall Tower
teetered a time or two.
On defense, we used a 3-man
floating zone against the other four
Lincoln boys. Our center, who was
only 11 Inches shorter than the
Swede, played in front of him. Our
big guard, who was only 13 inches
shorter, played behind him. Every
time they got a pass off for Hal
brook to tip on in there was a
scramble.
Our two boys finally fouled out
but the Spire didn't make 'em
all like he did against Central Cath
olic. Then, whenever we got a free
throw, we took the shot Instead of
taking it out of bounds. That ic
counted for another 15 points and
was enough to win the game.
' The only hitch was that our play
ing all was done from the back
row, grandstand. Halbrook didn't
know anything about it. He just
kept flipping them in against frus
trated Central Catholic, and Lin
coln is the New Champ.
NEW YORK (fl Stray thoughts
of a new video fan:
A new form of exercise in the
American home is getting up to
answer tne teiepnone only to dis
cover It Isn't your own phone ring
ing its tne pnone on a television
program.
It elves you a sheenlsh feeling.
but on the other hand it also gives
a man a good excuse at least for
not answering his own phone at
an.
Television is credited with build,
ing up a national public for sev
eral political figures.
But this little view box can des.
troy as well as build. And isn't
this already becoming evident?
The American people love a hero,
but the glamor of a hero who talks
too often and is seen too much soon
wears thin. People weary of him.
Part of the success of Franklin D.
Roosevelt's famous fireside chats
lay in the lact he dldn t make one
every day.
Are some statesmen already
making the mistake of inviting
memseives too 01 ten into American
living rooms via the television
screen?
It is a thought that must cost
them considerable soul-searching,
because It Is a long time between
now and November. The political
epitaph of some candidates may be
this:
"I voted against him because I
mi i n 11 1 iiIit 'ii mi 11 1iiniirmm'
was Just plain tired of seeing nis
face, and couldn't stand the idea
of looking at It for another four
years."
s The trouble with using television
as an electioneering medium Is
that even the wisest speaker, the
most veteran campaigner, doesn't
realize the point at which he may
begin to bore more people than he
Interests.
Television Is without doubt the
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
year s.11.00
chore even for modern man and
his ideas of econcmics.
The green, green grass is bo
Binning to break through In spots
You spot It in lawns around towns
and on a few sun-warmed baliks
around the country side. The ire
is going off the lake, the farmers
are going crazy waiting for fielos
to dry out. the ecese arc heamnu
north by the hundreds of thousands
and the Sporting News Is bark to
headlining baseball, looks line a
change in the weather.
Speaking of geese. There was a
yarn in the paper last night to the
affect that fish and wildlife mm
were banding geese with plastic
bands around the neck in order to
find out their flight plans. The Idea
being that if you spot a kooso
wearing a colored necklace you re
port it to the nearest federal
agency along with such pertinent
information as the goose's direc
tion, altitude, ancle oi ilieni and
probable plans. Then they check
back on the color of the neck band
and find out which way he went.
Wonder who will be the firs', to
spot one in this area?
Vv tcpiA a : ij
Fighting the 25-year-old battles
all over again, the question came up
of how our team got to be a winner.
There were taller men in the od
position. ("Buck" Buckley, who
used to own the Standard Cleaners
here, was one of them.) There were
faster teams: there were cleverer
teams; there were more sensatlor.l
shots. Bob Brown was a good coach
but he was no Svengali.
In retrospect of a quarter century
(some outsider was unkind enough
to put It that way) the answer as
that we were pure amateurs: We
played basketball for the love of it,
for the love of doing it better than
the next team.
Individual competition was fierce
on the practice court, but on the
floor against five strangers the plav
was as a team, to win, that's all.
A good team can be beaten. A
champion gets beaten btft once. Our
outfit took a defeat early m tne
season found out that it could nan.
pen but that it was not necessary.
From then on we knew that v.e
COULD win if we played It right,
and from then on went after each
opponent as necessary to win. (And
this included leaving yours truly to
sit It out on the bench for inter
minably long spells.)
The halftlme intermission of a
basketball game is a dull time. A
time to get up and stretch your
legs and have a Smoke. The bOUO
spectators in McArthur Court in
Eugene can't all get out and stretch
so they have something or o!hr
going on between halves.
At the high school title game last
Saturday they introduced the Old
Champs, the "boys" who'd gotten
together to tell each other how
good they were 25 years ago.
Here, for a moment it was the
real thing again.
Waiting to go on, you got the
whiff of sweat as the other players
came off. Here was that scared,
excited feeling as you measured the
awesome size of those players.
Your name was called and you
walked on the floor the playing
floor. The crowd was forgotten . . .
things were about to happen . . .
For a brief moment it was a
game again, and you were there on
the floor rarin' to go . . .
A few words were spoken . . .
and you filed out, to make your
way to the grandstand, back row
. . . for the second half of the
real game.
. And for you reader, you can re
lax. This won't happen again not.
Ill ISTf.
77- 'Jvf
greatest entertainment bargain
since the free shows the Caesars
put on in the Coliseum at Rome.
Mediocre as many of the pro
grams are, the average man, what
ever his interests or educational
level, can find 10 to 15 hours of
entertainment worth his attention.
The programs would be even bel
ter If as much time, talent and
effort were nut into them as are put
into the commercials. That is why
more and more thoughtful viewers
prefer the artful and tuneful com
mercials to the drab programs that
precede and follow them.
Maybe the answer is for the spon
sors to concentrate even more on
the commercials and drop the pro
grams aiiogeiner.
My small God-daughter no longer
looks at the programs. But she
drops her toys and comes running
to watcn tne commercials, iney re
more exciting.
Much has been written about the
euect 01 television on children. But
how about exploring Its impact on
housewives and household pets.
My own wife, for examnle. hasn't
darned a pair of socks or sewn a
button my clothes since our set
arrived. . . .
' I've got TV eves." she cxnlalns.
"Just can't see to thread a needle
any more."
As to household pets, a fr end of
mine who owns a cat had to give
up television In her home alto
gether. "I had to choose between it and
my cat." she said. "Mv cat was
Jealous. Everytlme I turned on
television she attacked the set and
tried to scratch it to death."
On the other hand I have besrri
of another lady whose cat likes to
sit and stare- at the television set
all day. Doesn't care about nnv
particular program, but wanders
aouui tne nousc, restless ana Un"
They'll Do It, Every ;Time
ttBLl.fOUUSLE.' WHO 00
iGO THINK XXJ'RE CKDEKIN
VvlXINDr'HUHr
oooo tuouM
I TWMK,
your T4ae,HiWPets stKrr!
XX) CWT 6MUT ME UP!
TM (50NN4 TELL VOU WH4T
ASEW4MTEO
AT KVR
I THINK Of XXI
MBlE-IU.
SEE XXJ
rW-LOCIN3 WIPE OF
VOURS f SO AHSAO! FlRfJ
rl VVELL,BEFORE HXI
DO.X QUIT.'.'
AH
I 1 ...Tl' IV
2m
OH I HI HVO tTV.5
.. It. 01 ft ..
5-
COOKIES
KLAMATH FALLS On behnlf of
the Klamath Area Girl Scout Coun
cil I would like to take Uiis op
portunity to thank all who assisted
me and all whq bought ' cookies
thus making our annual Girl Scout
cookie sale a great success.
.Mrs. Fred Karlson
Cookie Chairman
FLOOD CONTROL
KLAMATH FALLS The front
page article by Hale Scarbrough in
the Friday, March 21, Issue cf the
Herald and News "Flood Cont-.ol
On Lost River Should Open Up
More Tule Homesteads." appea-3
to have left us in a wee bit of
confused state of mind.
We ask. "How is it possible for
a nice clean drainage ditch In the
headwarters of Lost River to add
to flood control when such con
struction makes It possible for the
waters from that part of the coun
try to rush, unimpaired, down the
river to the lands below: drainlna
Lengell Valley in the. shortest pos
sible time?"
Just how ths expedited system
of drainage will afford "protection '
to the Tule Lake Basin from flood
appears to be an enigma. Our
federal Bureau has repeatedly told
us that the way to prevent floods
is to provide bigger and better
reservoirs to catch and hold the
excess flows of water. Of course,
by so doing, we would also obtain
a series of "multiple use benefits"
from the construction, a fact usu
ally confirmed by a series of
pseudo-economic computations by
bureaucratic experts. .
Now we are told that a nice;
clean straight channel that can
bring flood waters down stream in
the quickest possible fashion w-fi
be a protection for the lands In
the valley below pardon my con
fusion. I am quite sure that the astute
engineers of the Bureau can ex
plain this unusual phenomena quite
happy, until thd , set 5s switched
back on.
I have also been.- told about a
dog that whines unless the video
screen is tuned to a Western movie.
"The only way I can figure It out
is that he is a city dog," said the
owner, "and It Is only by looking at
Western movies that be ever gets
to see trees."
TONITE
on KFJI
FAMILY THEATRE
at 7:00 " -.
THE CISCO KIP
of 7:30 . n
and What's The h
, Name of That Sonjj
.' at 8:30.1 V:?
1150
Wafrj
MUTUAL BROADCASTDtO STSTDf
rWii'H:ll,H.','WJM
m m a .
w is!iia
1 1 1 - aniirtiTiinr IwiiSjV
1JN uu" I WW
this famous Jtk QjBig'
westerner TtT
TONIGHT at 5:30 (Sfes i
KFJI-vr C
twb MteKwsr
OUV iM THE JOirJT
SO I rWT
ALL VEAR-POT THE
to err at
OFFICE DANCE IS MIS
KI6MT TO HOWL"'
AND 1UAT ,
MS H1FE HAS
HOLCHNS MM VOMi ALL
M6HT BUT HE GOT Amy!
I HOPE THEY'VE
LOT OF WAR
4
1.Q
dearly in their simple non-tcchnt
c.il fashion of bafflegab and re
lteve us of this horrible feeling nf
irusiration in irvum to i uure tiio
thing out
. For a number of years we have
been lead to believe that the wat
ers of Lost River ran out on tho
alluvial plain of upper Langell Val
ley only to sink into a porous soil
structure that formed a large sub-
terreman catch basin acting as an
underground reservoir. This refr.
voir was capable of holding a con.
siderable portion of the river's flow
and in the winter would store up
flood waters then release them in
a steady flow from big springs in
the lower portion of Langell Valley
Basin.
This fortuitous system of water
regulation provided by Mother Na
ture, naturally would not satiIv
the engineers and so they muit
take steps (at a slight additior:il
charge lo the cost of -the project!
to correct this erratic method that
Mother Nature has used to re
Charge the ground waters of tin:
Langell Valley Basin.
' So the engineers are going to dis
a ditch which should prohibit a:iv
large 'degree of water percolation
io uus underground reservoir. ""SiDear Bill:
action w ii oe a mosi interesting
"
should settle for all time the spec-
uiauon over vne source oi me oigi
springs on ixisi ttiver. li u is I'ue Prom the (lrst of June through at
as some contend hat these springs , ,east 0clober j , expcct ,0 see
are fed from waters stored up n you clBd on, , the brlc(eat of
the Langell Valley Basin due to shorts pongee shirts, and sandles
Lost River getting "lost." the attrh mled wlln bobby gox
would provide the answer Wntm Too, u you cari flna- no au(uble
which once could percolate into rcadlng matter at Carmlchael's, I
the underground reservoir will bcsugKm vou conlmuc rending those
able-to rash down the man pro-conllc SUpplements which have so
video" channel without seeping lmoigreally mfluenced your wrmil t0
springs should diminish in flow due
to the fact their supply source
would be curtailed.
The winter an! spring flow of
water in Lost River would then be
increased by tne amount of water
subtracted from the springs and
greater quantities of water would 1
nave to oe spuieo irom 1-051 tuvrr
into Klamath River than at tne
present time, this extra discharge
would have to be compensated by
greater drafts from the Klamath
River to Lost River during the ir-
Announcing the newest Triple-Action
m r
ONLY
Low down
Youllbt floppier with a ffoovtr
VERN OWENS'
CASCADE HOME
COMPANY
124 No. 4th
By Jimmy Hatlo
THE BOSS WAS JU6TXBWT
kcaut TO FuKSIVE AHO
FORGET BOOT LAST' YEAR.
REAIEAiBERP WHEN TKfctiBLE'
CHIN YiAS DOHS THE ADVK3
WITH OL LAUr BECOME "
' THE OL' TRUTH SERUM
BFEfJ
BVWJRKINO-'THlSIS
, THE REALTKEWSI.EOM-
.TOMORROW rCUU. SEE
GOT A
THE ohEU. OF HIS
in
I
n
7:1
BONDS TO
rawest self
Opfce PARTIES ars.
&XO FOR MORALE-'
AWKE FOR BETTER
RELATORS BETWEEM
EXECUTIVES AHO
employees (on, yew?)
rlgatlon season.
Since 1938 the Bureau has been
dumping each year some 110.000
acre feet of water from Lost River
Into the Klamath: yearly umoui.is
have ranged from 234.'J00 acre ievl
down to 44.350 acre lect. The an
mini draft from the Klamath River
lo Last River has been around S4
000 acre fect of water; yearlv
amounts ranging from 34.100 down
w ..
Just why tlie Bureau engineers
should create a project that will
Increase the Hood potential and la
bel It "flood control" is one of
those unexplnnuble actions of bu
reaucratic gobbledegook, however
j " could be. the Bureau lacks the
"""i loruiuac 10 aau a arain.
age system by Its true name be
cause they seek to hide the fact
that a comparatively few acres ut
land will be "benelllcd" by an ex-
pensive boondoggle.
When, if ever, "the flood" doos
come and I mean the "Hood1' spec
ter the Bureau people are always
rattling In the closet, the people ol
Tulclake arc quite apt to get wet
feel because the Bureau Is doing
everything possible to get the wat
er there in the quicke.il and most
direct fashion. When that tune
comes one wonders If the Lost
River Division Channel will prove
to be a trap Instead of a route ol
escape.
Ken Mrl.fod
413 Ultll
Ancr hllvlI1R rcnd Monday nlghl-s
Bullbourd (Billboard?) I am suf.
lenng B BKKruvated anal hemhor-
rage ,or you and your suffering.
Sincerely,
Robert I1. Currln
412 N. 11th St.
Meteors are luminous bodies usu.
allv referred to as shootlna stnru.
when they fall to the earth they
are ca'.ied meteorites.
" Jefferson's Manual" is the basis
of the rules of procedure In both
the U. S. Senate and House ol
Representatives.
uu
Cleaner Model 29
High cleaner performance at moderate
cleaner cost . . . that's Hoover's newest . . ;
Model 29! Triple Action... it beats, as it
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obligation.
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payment - Easy monthly
terms
FURNISHINGS
Phone 8365
Letters Must Be Sinned
Du lo tha (derailing numbar of Inqulrlai ragnrrllng
Itttari to (ha adltor ilgnad only by Initial tha Harald' '
and Nawi will, starting today, raqulra a full nama and
addrast on all lattari of avan faintly controvartial
natura submlttad to this papar for publication, Wa hava
triad In tha past to publish cartain lattari on what Wa
fal? wara non controvartial subacti Without a nama
whart tuch a raquast was mada. It it Impoislbla, dua to
tpaca limitation, to kacp a complata fila of lattari for
fiublic Impaction, howavar, and to In tha futura all
attari muit ba ilgnad.
Western Powers Face Up
To Russia; Plan German
Tie Despite
WASHINGTON W The West.
em powers gave evidence Wednes
day of pushing ahead with plana
lo cement as much of Oermri-y
as possible to the Western world
legardlesa of Russia's tactics.
i he toughened policy of the
United Stnlei, Britain and France
for dealing with Oernian questions
where Russia la concerned war
spelled out III a note sent to Mos
cow Tuesday and made public by
the three nations.
This 600 - word declaration, re
sponding to a new Soviet propositi
of March 10 to start work on a
Oermiiu peaco trraty, aid two
things:
1. It served notice on the Krem
lin that Western nations, In clo.-;
cooperation with the anll-Coimmm-Isl
government of West Oerinnny,
arr firmly committed to ileiug
Germany In wnole or In part to
a "purely defensive European
community."
State department officials who
helped draft the note said this
There's Still One Born
Every Minute Almost
Chief Freed
In Bay Wreck
OAKLAND, Calif. Wl A Su
perior Court Jury says a Navy
chief was not responsible tor the
Bay Bridge bus plunge that killed
eight persons and Injured 31 ser
iously. Orvllle C. Russell Jr.. 25. form
erly of Independence, Kas., was
prosecuted because his automobile
had hit a bridge abutment and
knocked a Inrge concrete block Into
the traffic lane.
A few minutes later, a Grevhound
bus crashed Into (he block and
plunged over a bridge railing and
42 feel to the ground.
Tlie crash occurred In Gftober.
Acquittal was voted Tuesday.
Russell was acquitted of bolh
manslaughter and drunk driving
charges.
The 2000 portholes In the trans
atlantic liner. Queen Mary, contain
.00 sq-iare feet of glass.
Each year, more thun 2.000,000
chickens end 300, COfl turkeys ro
reproduced In the Arkansas valley
of Colorado.
See and drive the newest
mm-
, " f"" IM OlOW iptulUMliVM ll)0l Ut ctuul wllbnut WMlra,
AMERICA SMARTEST MHARDrTO
1952 Commander V-8 or
It's one of eleven far-advanced new
Studebaker style stars!
t
Clean-lined Studebaker design
assures you real gas savings!
Studebaker Automatic Drive or Overdrive available in.all modelf, at extra wit
Mcculloch Motors
Klamath & 8th. Phone 4149
'If
Red Threat
meant the European defense com
munity being formed to enable
West Germany to put inllltniy
forces Into Gen. Dwlght D. Eisen
hower's Western defense arinv.
3. It challenged the Iturslans In
prove the sincerity of their de
clared Interest In unllylng On
many by permitting s United Na
tions commission to go Into the
Soviet tone and find out what op
portunity exists there for holding
free elections.
The three power thus mule
clear to the free peoples of West
ern Germany and oilier Western
countries their decision not to be
diverted from the path of rearm
ament. Official)! here predicted the new
note would lie lollowed by a Inn 4
series of exchqnues such a '.ns
taken place regularly In the lni',1
five years.
These exchanges over the venrs
have coiul.itciilly reflected a bald
ening of the antagonistic positions
of the Communist and free nall'ms.
WETUMKA, Okla. i There's
a sucker born every minute but
Wetumka thinks It has more than
Its share.
So, for the second straliihl year,
the City Council hns de.-lgnated
Aug. 30 as "Sucker Day."
The Incident dates back two
years ago when a smooth-talking
stranger, calling himself F. Bnm
Morrison, breezed Into town with a
big story about a circus which
was on iLs way to Wetumka.
The towaipeople kicked In money
to teed the elephants and auiiuuls.
Morrison even sold the hot dog
concession to an unsuspecting mer
chant who stocked up with a year's
supply.
The big day came, but the circus
didn't, and Morrison could not be
lound.
But the City Council mlnht hsve
passed over "Hurker Day" this
year were It not for another em
barrassing Incident,
March 15. the mayor,' Chamber
of Commerce, and townspeople
lined the streets to welcome the
Oklahoma City Chamber of Com
merce and Its famous "Kiltie'
Drum and Bugle Corps,
Again the hour arrived, bu' the
Oklahoma City delegation didn't
show up. Tlie mayor checked his
letter from Oklahoma City, and
found the date was April 15, not
March 15.
Mock Battle
Features
FORT IIOOIJ, Tex, I A mush,
rimming cloud ot smoke, blllowliiK
Inslly upward In a blue sky sis.
imlcil the use of almllated atomic,
weapons In a muck war that Is
coldly realistic.
An hour and a half after a
brigade of S'Jiul Airborne "Augrea.
sor" troops parachuted from ylunl
transport planes Tuesday, Hit
Klomiu cloud burnt over the drop
mine.
It Wat irally Just a smoke bomb
limed to rxplotio at about 1,600
fret,
Tho Army ciiiiimimliiiio, No. t
of Operation Long Horn, bigurnt
rtlr-urttliml llinni.iiVMr f,t II u titil-
Itaiy history alitted briefly' with.
out oeiiiu: mo u. . H, ground
Itl'KHu rlll,.H,..,H . .... ,.
iigaliiNl the BgBicssor ground
'I'll.,. M.n . II . a ' . ,
.... u pianns in
""'""w nurit con.
trolled the sky. . .
I Trior tu the maneuver's atart.
jl.t. tien. William Jloje. Fourth
Annv .commander utid ihsiiruyer
director,' hua iiniioiinced -iiiomio
! weapons would bc used in im.
Ijilatrd fashion during tho Mnrtu
jAi-Aprll 11 war game, .I t
I At the snnin time, the, Arftiy
j announced U.S. plm ,,f ,(,
Hinted nlom bombing Victoria. Ho
:2' """" Alice and Hondo.
Boulh lexaa towns held bv tha '
KumcsMir forces In o smelly
l"Pr part f 1P operation tilt
; involves lls.ooo men
1 JJiip paratrooper wa, killed in
the drop uh,n , ,,, , . "
: announced a., a brigade In " "i
1.31(1 men. Tinny-four were in.
Jured. including Col. Stanley I a?!
son, youil.1,,1 commander of t
J-'5 Airborne Infamry Itegi .
o suffered . broken hlp.ttjv" J
Jumpers recetved fractured JeJ,
and one a fractured back.
HoweStl
Cuts Budaet
i budget-cutting drlv, ps, ,hc .
! J..7a Interior Department
; appropriation bill was set up m
the next tarnel. 9
I Already dimmed from President
I rumnii s requested 62.00 600 by
he Appropriations Com lee, ht
Interior measure ollrred little on.
orttmlty for heavy slashing, ft vtas
:eheduled fitr iinui m
day.- "
f 'iMTJi J!!'"'' ,alr Tuesday of
I.7S3.2.M bill flnaliclnn Hi,
I L--"r vpurtnipnt mid the Federal
jt iiv .-wv for the fiscal year
IMllrtlnv .into 1 ttl (i.. in,.i .....
thus fur shiihily over a billion doi
Jhirs. I Hie l.nhnr.H,.n1 .u.. 1.111
was 1200. 107. 8P3 less than tlie Pres.
Ident had requested, and was the
third aurceudve budurt measure
thr ItriiiMj. liM,n,A,l a,..
free bills has been considered by
uir oi;umr.
O '3 J03 of the; reduction
n ! Istior-Frdrrsl- grcunty I
mcnarr Initialed bv the House
I n.clf The rest was Imposed by
jibe Appropriations Committer,
whose recomnienillttioiis?: nitre ac
cepted.- - .-J , v. .
One-third of the cxlstlnu "saw
Umbo!" In the United States Is lo
cated In the western half of Ore
lion anj Wnnhlimlo:!.
of the
new!
Champion
Moitadmlreei, rfioif detired
new Studebaker In years)