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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1953)
CUBTU COY U3i3T MAN1 pn Jl UvLOUj laMs t-sWKrafjfa 4 WMMt to a far toe uttOtrmlOMot MMI MOM lAaatuikwABd not IBIWasw Ws-M BOW t today accused few tare (op Rue l3f the daalhe any hotiiiiviiw. ' K MM Inst. WW VMM that tang MMf the iM fee bWu .aa of the wot too chuw MB. . IhJtMta aft a V! at tao iUkua "oealo" by Un atltwHa JMKor MW. aha an at filtuK TIM . ,' leapaa whoa too as ks to few WBe aft Nt ! H a at- tt a a an l urn, y. - . i k. 4 k-r if . tta aVorrta OltB kt Kwnmonl to fM I tmuhotm am- 4 ooiUUnU 34 ay wiio my ot ptMiat itv annm or- I acaao onor um M taaaaaf OUM f a-4 Mo ! ioyal o o-r.r- 4 O. ft IWI -CM. ir ..3 a V, at ala t tro yaon.. jrd woo' Mlootod rU -iteoM for ra arottbtort r-ar44 wtth i.t"-. Moqr $ rnli 4-41 c -out Mar i y Mayor - - jiriji i Wrtieipot dinar's, t r: t ft, J .a't-wty ..., va.ot fc'I''-'iTjH:,.Your I irNtw' t -nr t, ' OwufMi ta T lor all . a- -d )t Of fta' Ta-tta rUe Ud. 4. ftirmy kte we ooraUra .-an MB McT tport1 nod ltoat tar to Landry Takes Action On KF Traffic Tieup lly IIAI.K HCARHROHttll Mayor I'aul Landry ban nominal' M a committee lo tannic with Klamath Falls' knottiest problem, Wat of how to handle tn Krowilm traffic load, and made It clear that ha axircta Ihe commllleo to come up with Ninie aiuwora rather than with the bitter disputes which have Men substituted In the pant. Tho problem ol hnndllnii cross town aulomoblle and truck trnlllc haa been a rncurrent one since the end of World War II. with the mull that ao tar almost, nothing baa been done about It. Last June the Slat Hmhway De parlmriit put belore the City Coun cil and the administration ol Mayor Bob Utompaon a net of recommcn. Stations by which the department Ottered In aiwnd about 84,000.. tW In and around Klamath Fnlls . . . It and when the city makes p H mind how It la going to handle Ha growing truffle load downtown: and the department 0 made aome pretty drllnlte suv- tlona aa to how It thouKhl that Death Claims IF Pioneer Mrn. Margaret Nclte Rulenlc. M, resident of Oreiion since 1090 and Of Klamath Fall since Wit, died Monduy evening, Jul). 12 at the boine of hrr daunhlrr. Mm. A. C. (Irene) Yaden, 630 N. Fifth Street. Mm. Rulenlc. wan born June 14. 1804 In I'erry County, O., daughter Of Albert and Elizabeth Hnrthol omew. She cams to Portland where :. MRS. M. N. RUTINIC rile married John Calvin Rutenlc, later a . prominent attorney in Klamath Falla. '. They lived for a time In Salem, tomlnir lo Klamath Falla with their Wo amall daughters by stage. Rut- lo oracticeri law here until he leotlred shortly before bla death In ts. Mrs. Rutenlc was active In the OUndln(f of the City Library, was OM of the charter members and do second president. She waa a i4omber of the Christian Church. urvlvlm nre two daunhtcrs. Mra. A, C. Yaden and Mrs. Ken- MUl (Ed Ul Kuten cl McLeod. 41 J ItUfh; one brother, Kelsey Barthol omew. Manlee. Fla.: five arand- Ohlldren. Mrn, Margaret Dimlt, Salem. Morton R. Yadon. Oawecn Clifford C. Yaden. Klamath Falls. Mrs. Jack E. smith. Klimxh Falls and Dale C, Johnson. 8n rranclsco: alsn eloht ffreat-eranri. children and two step-great grand children. Funeral arranitemenls are to be announced by O'Hnlr'a Memorial Chapel. i) LI J Tultma Marsh Plans OK But FW Likes Own Best By MALCOLM KPI.KV JR. Tulnnn Farms' proposnl for de veloping the controvcislnl Mnnnlng Tract for both agriculture and ml Rrutory waterfowl and public shooting tins considerable merit. Refuge Mgr. Tom Horn of Tulelnkc snld Inst night, but that plan doesn't fit into Fish and Wildlife programming. The two foctlons presented their cases boforo a general meeting of the Klnmnlh Sportsman's Associa tion In the Wlnema Hotel Inst night. About 00 persona were pres ent, llie Mnnning Tract Is lornted nt tho north end of Upper Klnmntli Lnko and to tho West of Agency Lnkc. II Is composed ol innrsli lnnds nt present, nnd Is bounded on tho West side by the Wildlife Service's Upper Klamnth Water fowl Refuge. Ttilnna Fnrms wns represented by Dick Hoiucl, who explained thnt pi'ipettinl hunting rights would be turned over to Fish nnd Wildlife control If his group wns allowed to obtnln possession of the tract, not only on the tract but on Tulnna lnnds lying to the north. On tho first unit of development Tulnna hns planned for the tract there would be 13 miles oi exter ior dikes nnd 30 miles of Interior drnlns; if and when Iholr pinns nre completely cnrrlcd out lor me whole nrea thero would be approx imately twice as many miles of d ko and drains, 'mo nines wouia hnve ronds atop them. Hcnzcl snld, nnd, almost every one agreed, thnt the Upper Klam ath mnrshlands hnve had few ot no birds to spenk of resting there should be bandied. Tttt departments No, I - plan would be to have one-way traffic on Main and Klamath, with alter native one-way traftlo on Pine and Klamath, or Klamath and Walnut, to get traffic through town from north to south. A second recom mendation waa lor east-west rout ine by means of one-way traffic on 6lh or 7th below Main down lo or across the railroad yards. Within a couple of weeka the Klamath Merchants Association, representing most of the larger downtown atores, voiced such strong opposition lo those propos- sis, thai the matter of figuring oul an effective traffic control system was let, slide until now. Last week, In a talk at a meet. Ing sponsored by the roads com mlltre of the Chamber of Com merce, Rep. Ed Oeary, who heads the legislative highways commit tee, mnde some pointed remarks about Klamalh Falls' Inability to get together with Itself or with the highway department, and declared that the whole argument Is foolish snd some "heads should be knocked together" to get the tiou blrs Ironed out. The Hlghwy Depsrtment Is Inde pendent, he said, and If Klamatn Falls won't solve -Its problem of truffle congestion ,on the principal downtown streets, the department will take Its money aomewhere else to spend. But If Klamath Falls will gel to. gether with Itself, Oeary Intimat ed, there Is a good chance that the atreet and highway Improve ment oftored by the highway de partment can be accomplished In the next couple ol yesrs. That "getting together" Is the Job of the committee appointed by Mayor Landry. The committee Is. composed of Al Hatlan, A. H. (Red) Buasman, William Meade, Vern Moore, Jim Kerns Jr., Oreer Drew, Harry Bol vln, Kasper Moty, Rudy Jacobs and Councilman Don Kenyon, most ol whom have business or properly Investments on the downtown streets. , When It was pointed out thai the committee was loaded pretty heav, Uy In favor of downtown property Interest, to the exclusion of per, sons who Just have to use the streets to travel on, Councilman Kenyon agreed, adding that "It Is their property that la apt to be affected." Ho Intimated, however, that ho txpoctod oomo dottalio acUaa to cow out nt tbo eommttleo.t . :. The Highway Departments $4, 000.004 proposal tor Klamath Falls Includes the one-way atreet pro gram tor channeling traffic first priority, construction of a new viaduct over the railroad yards as second priority, a west side bypass to take through traffic on U.S. wi around town, an east side bypass to hook up U.S. 07 north of town to Oregon M and Oregon 30 south' east of town and other Improve ments. In addition to that committee Mayor Landry made several other sppolnlments lsst night, with coun cil approval. They were: Traffic Safety Council Ralph Waggonor, Sam Rltchey, Kcllli Cobo. Rex Dye. Charles Banc, Charles Carlson, Haarby Bechen and Councilman Prank Tarr, add ing Charles 8. Houston, Weyer haeuser aatety engineer. Library Board Oeorge Mclntyre and Ted' Durment reappointed. Armory Board Wendell Smith and Fred Hellbronner. Boxing Commission Dr. George Adler chairman, Remy Stein, Roy Rakestraw. 8am Nealln and Walter L. Thompson, reappointed. Cemeterv Committee Keith O'Halr replacing John Van Doren. Llnkvllle Cemetery committee (Continued on Pago 41 In past years until nearbv Tulnna developments brought heavy fields of grnm Into the picture. At pres ent, he snld, seasonal wnter fluc tuations prevent nestings bv birds In the mnrshlands. With Tulann's development, he suggested the Fish and Wlldllfo might build control structures nnd a dike around the south end of the refuge, adjacent to the Manning Tract, thus pro viding controlled wnterlevcl In thnt nroa for the birds. He nlso suggested a strip of gritlnfleld a hnlf mile wide and run ning the length of the tract as a buffer between the refuge nnd the tract's grnlnflclds If they were to bo developed this wny. The strip would be farmed on a shareci'op bns is by Tularin until their lease ran out, at which time Henzel pro posed Fish snd Wildlife could tnke It over to hold as a bird feeding area. Jim Snvngc, federnl game-agent for this ares, called on retention of our marshes. He said If they were taken away, the ducks would be losing their home. "Wo need a bslance of marshes, he snld. He said he wns not agninsl development, which he defined as moaning "from all nnglos," The marsh should be Improved and de veloped for ducks. Savage snld the only birds which used grnlnflclds nre Mallards, Pin tails' and whltef ranted and snow geese. The remainder need marsh areas for homes, "We need a bslance of marshes, feeding areas and shooting areas," the game agent declared. The only (Conllnaed on page 4) Prlea (ftoo Ceato-lt Pagaa KLAMATH PALLS, OREGON, TUESDAT, JANUARY U, 10U Telephone till Na. J31 C-46 VrecIc Found; No Survivors FI8H HAVEN, Idaho Gfl-A big search parly gathered at Beaver Basin south of here early to reach the burned, crumpled wreckage of a C40 troop transport which crashed last week with 40 persons aboard. Two para-medic rescue troopers, who spent a lonely night long vigil In subfreetlng weather by the wreck on White Pine Ridge about seven miles west or here, found no survivors when they parachuted to the site yesterday. Air Force officers, veteran Idaho woodsmen and peace officers manned the cortege of military vehicles, 12 ambulances and two snowmobiles. The party will enter the uninhabited wilderness on a Forest Service road, then travel two or three miles on foot. The hike will be up a steep slope, heav ily wooded and cut with deep crevices and ledges. VANISHED The plane, which vanished Wed nesday en route from Seattle to Pi. Jackson, S. C, carrying re turning Korean War veterans, hit the mountain with an explosive Impsct al the !.50u-foot level, about 700 feet from the top. The para medics said only the tall section remained Intact. The 17 Korean veterans aboard were en route to their Southland homes. The three member crew Included a young stewardess. MaJ. Dick Burt of Ogden, a Civil Air Patrol pilot, spotted the wreck age yesterday. Later 1st. Lt. Dan E. Fitzgerald, 43rd Air Rescue squadron, McChord Field, Wash., who lives In Camden, N. J., tad bis fellow OaroHkioAlc, T. tot. . WM at 'MMt "PaT nan. cTluted fS the mountain slope, . , DRIVEN Thtv found the wreckage and reported -that the plane'a wings apparently were driven deep in the heavy snow. Searchers said the craft apparently dove sharply into s mountain crevice ana splat tered over a 9uo-ooi area. Capt. E. W. Morris of the 41st Air Rescue Squadron ot Hamilton Field, near San Francisco, com manded Die ground party, which spent the night at Logan, about 50 miles south of here. The group carried radios to maintain contact with the para-medlcs via an SAID search plane overhead. Man Returned To Military Ellis B. Alexander, 38, who has been In Jail here under the name of Oiles Lloyd Dingus since Oct. 31, was released In custody of two Army men today for return to Camp Stoneman, Calif. Ho is wanted by tne Army for prosecution on a charge of being absent without leave, and military authorities said that after he was punished at Camp Stoneman he would be shipped to Korea. An indictment charging Alexan der, or Dingus, with obtaining property by false pretenses, a bad check charge, was dismissed this morning by Circuit Judge David R. Viuidenberg at the request of District Attorney Frank Alderson. Aldcrson said he believes Alex ander would be adequately punished by the Army, and That releasing him from tho criminal charge here would snve the county some money. In order to prosecute Alexander on the check charge, the district attorney said. It would be neces-J ssrv to bring sn omcisi oi a Texarknna, Tex., bank here. The check Alexander was ac cused of passing was drawn on a Texarknna bank, for 110.36. ' . State Worker Dies in Truck BLY A state highway employe, Earl J. Maxwell, nbout 45, wns found dead In a department truck early this morning, apparently of asphyxiation. He Is believed to have been sin gle and lived In a trailer here. About 1 a.m. Maxwell was re ported to have gone to the highway shops building to get gasoline for his truck. At 8 a.m. another high way employe, Lyle Unger, went Into the shop and found Maxwell sitting In a truck, dead. It was not his truck, but another belonging to the highway crew. The truck ' motor was running, a ventilator to the building had been closed, and the building was full of exhaust fumes, Kaler's ambulance was called, but Maxwell was pronounced dead before the ambulance arrived. Sheriff Red Britton and Deputy Coroner Clarence Ward took the body to Klamath Falls. Vision Needed For City's Development This Is the first af a aeries of article U be published in the Tuesday laaues of the Klamath Falla Herald and News for (he next foar months. This survey of Industrial, commercial and cultural ac tivities In Klamath Falls and the Klamath Basin will be written and published lo show the stability of resources and the potentialities for future development. The carrying ant at this educational program baa been made Boaaible by the support accorded It by 3t representative Industrial and commercial firms who are demonstrating their confidence in the future of this region. Each at these firms has aa interesting mes sage oo Pages t and 7 In mis issue. By R. KENNETH EVANS No steps in human, material or economic advancement, however taken, can be accomplished without first visualiz ing the consequences of the achievement and, having in mind the objective and purpose of these n I steps. An architect first Duuas nis siruc- rJ-d in Kio minri inff if in a Vision i . iuic j the beauty of H1 snH nnrnoses ! Raphael or i picture in nis ' r , . r R. K. EVANS 3t X. aV of thought and industry, the grasp of the completed ideal, the vision, the mental structure. Then follow! a realization of the ideal. The material completion of the pre-vision must be the result of industrious, earnest effort and the con scientious fitting of the material structure to. the idealistic . .,;,., r.1 h onmnleted structure. ' P"" " Morse Loics Major Posts BULLETIN- VOTED DOWN WASHINGTON lf The Senate today voted down the plea sf Sea. Morse llnd-Ore) that be be per mitted to keep his seat on the important Armed Services Com mittee. By a written ballot, aa unprecedented procedure, the Sen ate accepted the slate ot eight Republicans and seven Demo crats for the 15-member commit tee which had been worked oul previously by parly caucuses. WASHINGTON I The con ference of Republican senators Tuesday upset a compromise plan and bumped Sen. Morse (Ind. Ore.) off his two major committee assignments. The OOP senators accioeo to take all of the eight majority nlaces on the Armed Services Committee and all of the seven majority places on the Labor Committee. The result was to knock Morse oft both coveted spots. This left open for Morse, who bolted the Republican Party dur ing the presidential campaign, spots on two minor committees. They are groups dealing with Dis trict of Columbia matters and pub lic works. Every senator Is entitled by law to two committee assignments. State Legislators Study ' Revision of Oregon Laws Br PAVL W. HARVEY JR. SALEM m The Oregon Legis lature was resdy Tuesday to tackle one of its biggest Jobs when the Statute Revision Council submitted its 5.039-page rewritten version oW all the state laws. The bill, longest ever placed be fore an Oregon Legislature, was in troduced In the House. Bv introducing it on only the second day of the session, the council gave the Senate and House Law Committees the maximum time to study the complicated mensure. Backed bv a strong recommend ation by Gov. Paul L. Patterson in his opening message Monday, the new law code Is expected to win the Legislature's approval. It will be the first time in S3 years of statehood that all of Ore gon's laws have been overhauled. The Statute Revision Council spent four years and 1300,000 on the vast Job ol rewriting, simplify ing and eliminating dead wood from tho laws, The new code will consist of only three volumes, while It now takes 16 big books to hold the laws. About 300,000 words were re moved from present laws. The chairmen of the two law committees are Sen, Paul Oeddes, Roseburg, and Rep, Carl Francis, Dayton. They will run the big task of preparing the new code for Leg islative action. a - - the adornment, tne aurarjuiiy of its various features. A Michael Angelo first sees the minu aim men u"us : V, Amuse TVi a mars lzea u iransiers it tu distinct the mental vision of the architect ural design, tht onginooring plant, tho art- ist's conception, the greater the possibility of the achievement. First must come, in the .rarinnc .pn lpaHini? on to the fruits Hfc uka HamathPaUs. t frkia MMirl 1UEO -V DKEt Ol Dooulac the vision of the complet ed whole. In other words, before a city oan pe oum highest Ideals and cope with the . mde uoon it by out standing growth, it must have a place in the minds of the people living in the community. All of the .um.nt, nt the utility and ethical values mus. oe iouvcitsu u uruw " . , nn tho oart very gt-. t -- ;--, iind commetlon ol an ideal com - iinitv A TOWN'S GROWTH EXEMPLIFY" J No town grows except by what It feeds upon. If it lacks ideals. mhitimv-.. hADes and aspirations among its people, just to that de gree does it become a deserted village, an abandoned camp or a sleepy hollow. Likewise, u tne billons are rising high, the pro- (Conttaued on page S) eggs Praise Tough Safe SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. Unable to break Into a market safe containing week-end receipts, a fully typed out a testimonial say ing he never had "worked on a better one." ' "If I have messt.'d this one up too bad for further use," the testimon ial advised, "I urge that you get another one Just like It." Meanwhile, the legislators were almost unanimous in their praise of Gov, Patterson's message, in dicating that the lawmakers will won in ciose narmony witn tne governor. ratterson, wnose service in lour Legislatures included a term as president of the 1951 Senate, should have an easy time with the legis lators because most of them, are his personal friends. While It appears likely that the Legislature will approve the new law code, lt also seems probable that the State Constitution might get Its first rewriting since Oregon became n state in 1839. . Gov. , Patterson's recommenda tion for a constitutional convention was received favorably by leading legislators. The convention would be delayed until 1956 because If the Legislature approved the idea, then the people would have to vote on it In November, 1955. The Joint Ways and Means Com mittee, headed by Sen, Dean H. Walker, Independence, and Rep. Henry Semon, Klamath Falls, got down to business Tuesday In its Job of making appropriations. It heard State Finance Director Harry 8, Dorman and State Budget Director Laverne Young explain the governor's budget, The first measure Introduced In the Legislature waa a memorial by the four Senate Democrats urging statehood for Alaska and Hawaii. 440 Planes ' Take Part In Air Strike SEOUL W The U. 8. Fifth Air Force hurled a crushing 440 plane strike against Communist rail facilities deep In Northwest Korea Tuesday. It was the seventh hammering blow on the Red life line In five days. U. S. Sabre Jets, flying protective cover, downed two Communist MIO-15s, probably destroyed one and damaged another, the Air Force said. The fighter-bombers streamed north In morning and afternoon raids of 220 planes each only a few hours after B-29 8uperforts plastered the ares with 100 tons of bombs in a night strike. Biggest news on the ground front was that two fresh Chinese Com munist armies about 70,000 men have moved Into the line on the Western Front. NO INDICATION Intelligence officers said there was no Indication of any new Red offensive in that area, however. They said one badly - mauled Chinese army was being pulled out oi we "me The warplanes piled rubble atop rubble in their pulverizing attack on a bridge complex north of Sin- aniu. Tne bridges span the chong ebon River and form a bottleneck in the supply line which funnels Red war equipment from Manchu ria and China southward to the from. Clouds of smoke billowed high over the target and prevented full observation. But the Air Force said the raiding warplanes scored numerous direct hits. 8TABBCB . . Aa Allied laidtag party stabbed tnto Red. Ultes la bcoe-chmint; pre dawn cold Tuesday and wanned up at least one section of the front. The raiders said they killed sev en uninese Kens and wounaea is in fierce fights which followed. The action narea east of ranmuniom on the western iront Another U. N. raiding party Jabbed Into Red lines on the Cen- ' , ... . aiuea. 0nlv Rrt nffmslv. action v. 'on the Eastern Front, where, 80 communist Infantrymen dented the Allies fought back in a twolhour I battle. Oil Companies Rap HST Plan WASHINGTON (.fl-A Justice De partment offer to compromise its antitrust action against an alleged international oil cartel bogged down today amid hot words point ing to almost certain rejection. One major prospective defend ant. Standard Oil of New Jersey, turned down the offer and thus apparently killed hopes of com promise since the government of fer was made on condition that accept it. Arthur H. Dean, Standard At torney, called the proposition "cold and outrageous blackmail" and said his company would have no part in it. At the same time. Stephen J. Sptngarn, chairman of the Federnl Trade Commission, called for con gressional investigation of the oil companies. Including what he de scribed as "the propaganda ca paign of villification they nre wag ing against their own government in 67 foreign countries." Spingarn, a Democrat, contended that any backing down by the U. S. government would ploy directly into the hands of Soviet interests abroad. The Justtce Department said tt was keeping open for the com panies concerned to come In and compromise the matter but no one talked very hopefuUy about this happening after the action by standard oi New Jersey. A stormy session between Atty, Gen. McGranery and oil company lawyers yesterday Included a gov ernment suggestion that the com panies let him know by 11 a.m., EST, today what they will do about the government offer. In the absence of unanimous ac ceptance, justice officials said they will go ahead with the criminal antitrust investigation pending be fore a federal grand Jury here and scheduled to resume Its ses sions tomorrow. Thnt would throw the whole mntter Into the lap of the Elsenhower administration. Reportedly acting on the advice of the National Security Council, President Truman yesterday sug gested to McGranery that the pro ceeding be abandoned In favor of a civil antitrust action. His proposal carried the key proviso thnt the petroleum giants co-opernte In preparation of the projected civil case against them by supplying records which the government hasn't yet gotten by grand jury subpoena. Automobile Aban'dona'd In Klamaf li A Burner. Calif., garage mechan ic was abducted from Burse ear ly last night and forced to aeoom- pany two men to Klamaui Falla where he waa dumped out of fcla own car early this momlnf. He Is Eldon Pat) Patterson, u. Patterson reported tho kidnaping to City Police here shortly after he was forced out of tba car at lUt and Commercial, The two men whom Patterson said kidnaped him at gunpoint had not been located at noon today, but the car -waa found late this morning abandoned In the M0 block i 8. 5th. Patterson said be was drivlne home from work at Burney, las. night when be saw a man on the street be thought waa his land lord. He stopped to offer this man a ride, Patterson said, but the man turned out to be a stranger. He Jumped Into Patterson's car, however, and another man not seen earlier also cot Into the car. and told Patterson to drive them to Redding. GUN One of them produced a gun. Pat terson thinks lt was a -3 or .45 caliber. - Burney Is located on U.S. 291, about 62 miles northeast of Red ding, at the Junction with Califor nia 89. Patterson said be drove out tba Redding highway some distance. when his abductors changed their minds about going to Redding, and ordered him to drive them to Klam ath Falls. He said be drove back to Burney and then down Califor nia 89 to McCloud and to Mt. Shas ta, where he had to stop for gas. Patterson said be had 831 In bla wallet, and that his passengers bad taken that money, returning nis billfold. At the service station one handed him back 85 to pay for the gas. Patterson kept the change, something over 1. He said be tried to motion to the service station attendant that he was In trouble, that a man In the back seat of the car waa hold ing s gun on him. , NOTICE Apparently the service station at tendant did notice, because short ly after Patterson's ear left the station, California, patrolmen wr notified of the happening at tba station and alerted to be on ine lookout for the car. Patterson said one of nis abduc tors drove the car Irons att. Ihaata to Dorris, and the? wereat aliniid At Dorria he waa rorcoa ajea back -under the wheel aaV dnrro on into Klamath Fallot - The Burney man aald that at 7th and Commercial be was forced out of the car, and bad to give up bis billfold to the two men. He said that the larger of the two men drove away in his car. and tne ouier one iert on root. Patterson walked to the An chor Grill and called police. NO DESCRIPTION Although be was with the two men for several hours and some 200 miles of travel, he was not able to give too much of a de scrintion of them. One. be told po lice was about 5-feet-ll, weighing around 195 pounds, wearing levis and a gray Jacket, and appeared somewhat older than the other. The second man he described aa about 5 feet-7. weighing about 165 pounds, dressed In levis and a levl Jacket. Both were dark, be said, appear ing to be either Indians or Mexi cans. Patterson said he wasn't harmed, and that the men seemed to just want a ride to Klamath Falls. State Police broadcast a descrip tion of the men ovr the state. Weather FORECAST Klamath Ralls and vicinity and Northern California: Scattered showers, cloudy tonight and tomorrcw. Low tonight 30, high tomorrow 45. High yesterday 45 Low laat night 3S Precip yesterday .13 Precip since Oct. 1 8.81 Same period last year 9.31 Normal for period 5.51 A ilCr SMILE tor the o'clock cameraman Wat of fered this morning by Kero lyn Kirby, 4604 Boardman.' sr-nwsaw. r s J 7) Q