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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1955)
PACK SIX FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS Editor Managing editor Entered is second c)as mtler at the post office at Klamath Falli, Ore, 00 August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, Marco $, 1879 MEMBER OP THIi ASSOCIATED FBKSS The Aiclatd Press Is entitled exclusively to the use (or publication of all local news printed in this newspaper as well as ail AP news. . . 8UBSCK1TT10N RATES MAIL CARRIER i Month t J.50 1 Month I 1.S0 ( Months I 1.50 Months I t.M I Year IK.OO 1 Vear SU.Oe ibillboard1 Oot a real good look at the Basin the other day and also got In some exercise. Scott McKendree, the fellow who invented the duck picker, and who alsj iixppens to own the. top of stukei Mountain, and I climbed in the faithful old Jeep and took off to see how close to the top we could get on four wheels. For the benefit of those who hsve wondered X can now reveal that the top of the hill is Just one big mass of boulders, rock out croppings, ledges and fire-killed timber. But it seems to do fine ss range because the cattle and horses up thataway do fine. We rattled around to the back of the big hill and camr- up the tar side, clambering over sage brush, boulders, twisting around draws and down trees and trying to get all the way to the top. Finally stopped by the rocks which were too much for the little truck to take. In fact, they'd be pretty near enough to stop a cat. But from up there one gets n View of the Basin that is really spectacular. The country seems as green as a golf course when you . look at it from this 6100 foot promontory and there is water all over the place. Rivers and lakes and ponds and swamps and ditches and canals until you get dizzy Just looking at 'em. You can see, even on a hazy day, clear over Into Lake County and in the Fall, when the air is clear and bright, I'll bet you could see a good deal further. Not that I recommend the trip, because It Is hard walking ' and even harder driving, but it was quite 'an 'eye opener. Hope to go around and do it again someday. The uranium fever Is still going strong over In Lake County, not to mention a lot of other spots. But there's more to the prospect ing than Just going out and find ing something that'll ring a gelger JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON, Wl The Rus sians, rejecting President Elsen hower's arms control plan, say they like their own better. Eisen hower will come up with another. What are the dllicrences between the two countries on disarmament? They can be explained In terms ei three ideas: 1. For years the United States had Insisted there could be no dis armament without complete Inspec tion, meaning, in the case of the United States and Russia, Hint each would agree to teams of Interna tional Inspectors. In both countries these Inspectors would have complete freedom to go where they wished and check as they pleased to be sure neither aide was cheating after agreeing to disarm and particularly after agreeing on abolishing utomlc Weapons. In that way only, the United Btntes felt, could any country be sure it wasn't being kidded into disarming Itself while another got ready to attack it. The Russians wouldn't buy that Idea. They wanted no foreign in spectors poking around in Russia. There the matter slood for years, eelthcr side yielding. 2. Last May 10 the Russians yielded a bit but not as lnr as the United States wanted. They said they would agree to teams of international Inspectors being sta tioned in Russia, but their move ments would bo limited. They could not have lull freedom to check anywhere In Russia. They'd be sta tioned at strategic points, like rail centers and airlield.i. This was the reasoning behind their oiler: No great power nowa days could prepare for war against another without vast movemenst of troops, planes and materials, all of which could be .-.Dotted liv the Inspectors at the airfields and rail centers. They could sound a warn ing. The Western Powers air suspi cious of this idea. A similar sys tem was set un In Korea niter the armistice there, but in North Korea tho Reds got around the agreement by building new trans portation centers awuy from those under inspection. Nevertheless, since Mnv 10 El senhower has indicated that per haps the United Slates would settle for something less than the 100 per cent foolproof syslein pre viously insisted upon by this coun try. Whv? Perhaps because in the atomic age no Inspection might be 100 per cent effective in detecting sneak manufacture of atomic weap ons. 3. At his Geneva meeting with V, F. W. SAT.. AUG, 6 DANCING 9 'til 1 Music by the STARLIGHTERS Members & Guests counter. There's the romance and the lure of the "big find." You'll never find the romance better ex emplified than in the names of the mines. Phyllis Buell, our corres pondent over in Lakevlew, sent me a list of names that have been filed on some of the mines and it reads lust like the gold rush days. A few examples were the Oolden Bubble, the Lucky Horseshoe. Black Arrow, Spike Top Tree, Lit tle Shoestring. Csts Paw. Nuggett, Luckv Joe. Last Chance Joe, Hope. ful. Hard Top, Lucky Lager, Strike It Rich. Q.T., Last Chance, Hign Count. Jackpot, White Lily, Lucky Velvet and many others. Some of the mines are named for the finders' wife or sweetheart and some go around under the plain cognomen of a number. But she's a real romantic bus! ness from top to bottom. And more and more people are taking along a eclger counter on the Sunday picnic. Maybe it'll even develop Into a national pastime. Women, and men in some liv stances, have been wearing the furs of animals for warmth and adornment for many years now, but at last they've taken what may be the ultimate step. They are now wearing fish scales. Honest. Revlon has come out with a new nail enamel that con tains "guanine" which is the stuff that makes a fish's scales glitter. You can purchase it in four colors platinum, pink platinum, blue white platinum and pink cloud. Not that we've seen very many pink platinum colored fish, but maybe it's alright. What with the pelts of animals, the feathers of birds and now the scales of a fish (or at least the stuff that makes up a part of the scales) It looks like we've about run the gamut of what can be stolen from the world of wildlife and utilized for human adornment. But maybe not, Russian Premier Bulganin and the Premiers of Britain and France, Elsenhower proposed on July 21 a twofold plan as an example ol this country s desire for disarma ment: the United States and Rus sia would (A) exchange complete blueprints on their military estab lishments and (Bl agree to let each other's planes take aerial photographs Inside their territories to check on military strength. Yesterday Bulganin rejected Ei senhower's proposal on tho grounds that the areas of the United States and Russia are so huge cither side could conceal anything it wished. He said the Russians regard their May 10 Idea as more realistic. Shortly afterwards at his news conference Elsenhower, apparently not disturbed by the Russian turn down, said the United States In dends to make some new proposals lute this month. Ho has had Harold E. Stassen studying the whole disarmament problem to bring it up to date and make new recommendntions which probably will bo different from those this country had Insisted upon for years. Eisenhower said this matter will take a lot of examination by a lot if experts.. Animals Destroy 1,306 Livestock SALEM W Livestock losses In Oregon blamed on predatory animals In April, May and June totaled 994 farm or range animals, and 312 chickens, turkeys and other poultry. The report was made by the Stale Department of Agriculture and U. S. Fish and Wildlife Serv Ice. They also said that predatory animals killed In June in the state totaled 113 coyotes, 101 bobcats, 60 bears and 3i foxes. The number of predatory ani mals killed In June by counties Included: Lake 48. Malheur 34, Marlon 26, Jackson 24, and Tilla mook 22. PAPER CLOSED BOOOTA, Colombia tfv The gov ernment last nlsht closed the op position newspaper El Tiempo alt er it refused to publish an army dictated corrective statement. '55 CHEVROLET 1845 DUGAN & MEST 410 So. 6th Th. 411 FREE They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hario " ""Tnice R3ROR4PeS-rr!SrJO,MO.'4a THOSE R4TTERNS tvtwy 64L SMOPPER BRiMSS very socrrum-rr would are so old-faswoked.' let's, ALOtiS THE FRIEND WHO IS 4 60 VVELL WPW MV SETTEE-- LOOK THE OTHER rf, SELF-APPOINTED STYLE WU-ST DO YOU I STORES-OU MIGHT AS M EXPERT"- !" gT&THMK.iHeRm? DO IT RjUT-yr IOXDWATEROHVOUR I ft JgZM mi r -ClTri seLEcnoris-vou get m rZ$fapttu Jr. f , rJi-J A LOOK AT HER LAY- Mi JZMT?W ffifJ OUT- (.U'MM-MAVBE M 9ffCi UW lLZrN THE DOCTOR SAYS BY KUWIK P. JORDAN, M. D. As a former sutlerer from rag weed hay fever myself. I know only toe well how the season sneaks up on one and suddenly about tho middle of August misery takes over. Like many others, I often did no planning until the last minute, even though I knew what was coming. Then would come the frantic search for vacation time and a place to go where the hay, fever would not be so bad I A more sensible approach for a person who has hay fever badly is to plan a vacation for the worst part of the season and pick a place where the annoying ragweed pollen Is absent or at least pres ent to only a slight degree. For this purpose, several places on the North American Continent are available. There is for example, practically no ragweed in tho Pa cific northwest and northern Cal ifornia, and very little in southern California, Arizona, and New Mexi co. The high Rocky Mountains them selves have little ragweed, though ragweed grows in the plains just east of the mountains. Tnere is practically no ragweed in southern and eastern Florida and there is a strip of territory in western and northern Maine away from the scaccast which is claimed to be free of this weed. Northern Minnesota and upper Michigan have less ragweed than farther south. Many victims of hay fever get a great deal of relief in these areas, though when a Letter From By CONGRESSMAN HARRIS ELLSWORTH It Is difficult to assess the part played by ordinary partisan poli tics In the story of what happened to the highway bill. The legislation was killed in the House by an overwhelming (more than two to one) vote. It Is dead for this year. The President months ago sent to Congress a carefully worked out proposal for a huge long-term highway construction program. The House Committee on Public Works, completely dominated by the op position political party (19 to IS), curtly rejected the Elsenhower plan and set out to devise a to tally different one of Its own. The administration highway plan was developed by a group of dis tinguished authorities on the sub ject of building and financing high ways. This group was appointed by the President and was presided over as chairman by General Lu cius Clay (retired). The defeated committee bill, developed by its Democrat majority, was put to gether hastily after weeks of feud ing. It was a pay-as-you-bulld plan, the heart of which was a list of sharp tax Increases. Tax legisla tion Is. of course, the function of the Ways and Means Committee, which group with Its staff is ex pert In that field. Such tax legisla tion always has weeks, onen months, of hearings nnd committee consideration. The Public Works Committee wrote the road bill tax section after only 13 hours of hearings and a very few days ol committee consideration. Floor de bate revealed many "bugs" and lneoulttes In it. When the vote came, the House just dldn t line the bill and members of boUi par ties Joined in killing It. The Upper Colorado reclamation bill was not rejected, it was merely put over until next session, as was the bill to aid the states DAMCE 1 1 1LA TOMMY and HIS Western Rhythm Masters Heard Over KFJI 5:30, Saturday Afternoon i "oo" Verso n "a x ind. 10 till 2 Oregon Time Calif. Time 9 till 1 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON strong wind is blowing from the south they often have trouble. Many of the national parks are good hay fever escape zones, Among them are Crater Lake, Bryce Canyon, Glacier, Grand Can yon, Grand Teton, Kings Canyon, Mount McKlnley, Mount Rainier Olympic, Grand Lake, Sequoia Yellowstone, Yosemite, Zion and Sun Valley. According to pollen studies, cities without ragweed in the air or with only small amounts Include Sacra mento, Miami, Reno, Portland lOre fron), Seattle, Spokane, Prince Al bert (Saskatchewan), and Mexico City. Favorable claims are also made for such places as Mackinac Island, Marquette and Cbarlevoix in Michigan; Bethlehem, B.-etton Woods and Dixville Notch in New Hampshire; and in Canada Campo bello Island in New Brunswick, Minakl Lodge, Port Arthur, and Hallburton County. Ontario, and Murray Bay, Quebec. This Is not a complete list but I should not want to guarantee results. With the exception of the areas which are known to be tree of ragweed pollen or have small amounts In the air. the amount of relief which hay fever sufferers get from the resorts varies a good deal. Some get almost complete relief. Some people are better than at home but not completely re lieved. Others seem to have Just about as much trouble, probably because they are sensitive to ex tremely small quantities of poilen. Washington on school classroom construction. Although both of these bills were roported by committee, they are considered major legislation and it was not deemed advisable to bring them up in the rush and hurry of the closing days of this session. As I have previously pointed out, the next session of Congress which will convene January 3, can take up all pending legislation where it Is left in the legislative process at the adjournment of this session. The Republican Members of Con gress both House and Senate had breakfast recently with Presi dent Eisenhower and the members of his cabinet. For me. It was perhaps the most interesting and stimulating experience of this oth erwise dreary session of Congress. I think most of the members and senators present felt the same way. I was Interested in observing Uie President's obvious good health and good spirits. Bear in mind that this breakfast was only a few days after the week in which he flew over to Geneva and back and sat through the strain of one of the greatest international confer ences in all history. I had expected to see a tired and worn, President Eisenhower. On the contrary, he was cheerful, laughing, and looked the picture of well being. His movements and gestures were quick and sure, and his talk to the group - delivered "off the cuff" was one of the best nave ever heard him make. RESCUED . LOUISVILLE. Ky., W Mrs. A W. Sarbo and six men had to rescue Mrs. Sarbo's daughter Jeanette, 4, after she tried to en ter a swimming pool by Uie exit. Her head got stuck in the bars of the locked turnstile. Her mother had forbidden her to go near the pool because she was too young. SAT. NIGHT RED BARN Dorris Calif. Music By 'J Sam Dawson NEW YORK, 1 In a business boom it's hard to spot the point where soundness ends and excess begins. The ordinary man never notes inflation in its wind-up stage. He becomes aware of it only after It. beans him with a rise in his cost of living. But the nation's monetary lead ers think they've spotted inflation warming up and are moving today to forestall Its hurling a bean ball. That's why they are boosting Interest rates, tightening the sup ply of credit, taking some of the extreme ease out of mortgages, and frowning on any tendency to runaway speculation in the stock market. What the administration and banking leaders seem to fear isn't price inflation, now showing up in Industrial materials, but credit inflation. Times are good and if business doesn't cross the line where soundness ends and excess begins, times will stay that way. The Federal Reserve banks are raising the rates at which they'll lend money to member banks, and at the same time are keeping a tight rein on the supply of money available for banks to lend to busi ness. The commercial banks are rais ing the interest rates on their loans to business and just at .he time when the volume of such loans is starting to rise toward its usual 'fall peak. Government agencies are curb ing no-down-payment, long-term mortgages. Banking leaders cau tion against laxity In extending; consumer credit. The Federal Reserve lrankly says its aims are to "discourage excess borrowing and protect the buying power of the dollar." Businessmen these days are con centrating attention on all the proofs that times are good. The nation's output of goods and services is at a record high. So are the totals of personal income and consumer spending and consumer borrowing. Business is expanding its plans to build more plants and buy more equipment. The total volume of personal savings continues to rise although the rate of saving has dropped. The traditional summer slump In business is unusually mild this year. All this adds up, in the minds of most businessmen, to a sound economic situation. They leave it to the bankers to worry about the point where soundness ends and excess begins. Library Reports Summer Reading TULELAKE Summer patron age of the Tulelake library is hold ing up satisfactorily with interest !n fiction far exceeding serious reading. Mrs. Lucille Gray, mother of Mrs. E. L. Coyner who has been librarian for the past eight years. announced that adult fiction taken ; from the library shelves, June 26-! July 26 totaled 291 volumes. Non-, fiction added up to 29 volumes for grownups. Juveniles read 323 volumes of fiction and 42 non-fiction. Fifty ' periodicals were taken out. ! The library is open Monday ' through Thursday, 1 to 6 p.m. and ; from 2-8 p.m. on Friday. ! MALAYAN ENVOY KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya MV A Malay with a mouthful of name left by plane today for Washington to "sell Malaya" to the United States. He is Rajn Ayoub Bin Raja Haji Bot. Officially designated as Malayan colonial attache to the British Embassy, he will make a six-month lecture tour. JUNIOR RODEO Sunday Aug. 7th 1:30 P.M. At Th9 Klamath County Fairgrounds Sponsored by th Klamath Sheriff's Poist tntrf Ftt fr ml) vtnU ti tl-M. Cub prlift far lit. 5ni, n4 ttt ltr. A Irtphy will t. .wardrtf fr hnl all r.nd cobT r rw(lr1. Art limit l II an' .11 p.rtlclpanU must hav a walvrr tlrntd bf parvnta. Waivori anal tntrr Or mvtt la flat. Ar Canlart Pal IWvmvr al UUpnant t".ii r Rt, t Hat klanalk I alls, Ort- Events Are: Rr.nr P. Minf. Calf KM Int. ShHUn fan? Rare). rl RritrtlNf, add It Haria Rar . Hr.rrt Rar. 1ia. Rarr'l Kara, Pan? r.tarni Kara drama f 4, Plaaa.r H.raa Ca.mi, Balan Kara drama f 4), Rrweta Rara Anal fratartflf lb. mtw pap.lar Palmrll. Pal. Gam. kf tw Leal Iran a, Qi.rttf Milt Rtrt (All eternal Admission 25c for children and 50c for adults The Lane County Parks and Recreation Commission in their re port "Recreation Unlimited" which was. addressed to the county com missioners and the citizens of Lane County does a little boasting nf the advantages Lane County pos sesses: "From the sparkling sand dunes of the coast to the snowy slopes of the Cascades, Lane Coun ty offers a greater variety and more abundant selection of recrea tion ureas than any other county in Oregon." Well there are other counties that might take exception to that remark but like Klamath County are doing nothing about it. The commission goes on to state a very important truth in regard to the opportunity for recreation: "Areas suitable for recreation, for merly so plentiful, are rapidly be ing built upon and disappearing behind barbed wire fences and "No Trespassing" signs. While this takes place, the growth of popula tion, and the means and Inclination for outdoor recreation continues anace. As the tide of children now rising through the grades reaches the hiking and camping ana nsn Ine aee. the need and demand for these areas and for these activities will multiply again.' This is what Lane County finds itself faced with "In the upper Willamette River area," states the qpmmission, "the U. 8. Forest Service figures for 1953 show that 33.000 campers used the facilities designed for 16.000 and that 6,700 picnickers used facilities designed for 2.400. Since these figures were released, new areas nave oeen opened, but the load on existing areas has not been adequately al leviated. Another example can be found in the 1954 report of the Oregon State Parks Division, which indicates that state parks in Lane County were used by 672.410 in 1954. This includes 649.422 day visitors, 2,675 day campers. 505 group camper nights and 19,808 camper nights by the public. Overnight camping by the public in 1954 in creased more than 50 per cent over 1953. "Nowhere in America can young people more easily enjoy the scenic or recreational areas of a truly wonder land' than in Lane County. The increasing number of those yoimg people makes It all the more imperative to preserve, protect and developareas for them and foi their children." The point that is emphasized in the Lane County. Commission's re port is that Lane County is be ginning to think about the needs of the people of Lane County and to do something about it. This is a welcome change in attitude from the former one that any Improve ment in the facilities for outdoor recreation were merely lor the out landers and the local citizen was something above and beyond seek ing recreation in his own back Wheel Chair Couple Marry LAS VEGAS, Ncv.. W A man and woman 'rolled into matrimony yesterday in wheel chairs. " Cnrl Dean Jensen. 29. a former naratroooer. and Gracie Wilson. 35, are both partially paralyzed. They met while undergoing treatment at a Veterans Administration hospi tal four years ago. Today they obtained a marriage license in their auto, because they couldn't get into the county clerk's office in their wheel chairs. Their handicaps, however,' couldn't keep them from rolling down the aisle later at the Wee Kirk o' the Heather wedding chapel, where they were married by Justice of the Peace John Mendoza. The couple said they'll return to Long Beach. Calif., where Jen sen now lives, to look for an apartment. Jensen, formerly of Ogden, Utah. and his bride, formerly of Spring field, Mo., hope to study art and become professional artists. Jensen's paralysis was caused by injuries suffered in an auto accident and Mrs. Jensen's by a fall during World War II Air Force training. SCREENS Window Frames Doori Sash Glais Estimates Gladly Given! THE GLASS HOUSE 11 i No. 11th Phono 7477 yard. After all. when' we venture off our own homestead and enter the outdoor wildwood it makes lit tle difference If that homestead is located in a backwoods village or a teeming industrial center we become a part of the recreation and tourist Industry. Lane County takes a look at this Industry as it effects its economy "The recreation and tourist 'in dustries combined form an import ant industry In Lane County. It has been estimated that county In come from tourists ranges up to 20 million 9 million from fish ermen alone and million from hunters." Now comes the most re vealing point of the commission's statement cnamoer ui -ujh-meree statistics show tourist and recreation dollars spent in Lane rnuntv bv its own citizens exceeds greatly the total spent by vaca tioners from outside the county or state." . .. Formerly any expression for the preservation of outdoor recreation was based upon the outlander, the loci citizen failed to realize that he was the one who actually paid out the major portion of the dollars spent In his community for outdoor recreation. The citizens of Klamath County are no different than the citizens of Lane County and here in Klamath County its own citizens spend hundreds of thousands of man days in the wildwood far ex ceeding the time spent by outsiders but let us return to Lane county. "An example of the size of the recreation industry can be found in a survey conducted in 1954 by the McKenzie River Chamber of Commerce of the McKenzie River area above Leaburg. Undertaken with the cooperation of the Parks and Recreation Commission, the survey estimated that the Income to that area alone exceeded $700,- 000 yearly from tourists and reo reationlsts. "This major source of county in come can be largely lost If the natural features which attract vis- itors are not conserved. Many fine sites are already gone, particularly near towns. The tourist and rec reation industry could grow to be the second or perchance even the first industry in Lane County If preserved, protected and devel oped." Lane County now possesses 27 county owned or administered rec reational sites: 16 state porks and wavside areas: 12 sites developed and maintained by the Corps of Engineers. U. S. Army: and 51 U. S. Forest Service Camps. While this list may appear impressive in numbers the people of Lane County are beginning to realize that this is inadequate to meet the needs of the county in the face of increasing uonulation pressures. It was for this reason that the Lane County Parks Commission was formed to plan for the present and the future. (Vodka in orange jnice) '"f ( It leaves you breathless mirtioff ttf qrtaitst name ' -VODKA 80 proof . Midef rom 1 00 grain neutral spirit! Sic PierreSnurnofiFls. Inc.. Hinford. Conn. Fun! Fun! Fun! Fun! DO-SI-DO and 20-30 CLUB Third Annual Western States quare Dance Jamboree Modoc Field Friday & Saturday AUGUST 5 and 6 O Dancing Swap Shop O Instructions rDinv,M?l,i0."."0il" " M,i" " 1 SoUlrdoy. FRIDAY NIGHT 8:30 P.M. FREE GET ACQUAINTED DANCE for tryont wild local and outsidt callers. County Fairgrounds. SATURDAY . O:30 A.M. SWAP SHOP AND INSTRUCTIONS both round and squarts. Fairgrounds . Exhibit Buildinj. SATURDAY . 1:00 P.M. BIG, SPECTACULAR SHOW OF DANC ING an Modoc Fiald with hundreds of doners porticipotins 7Sc par parson for doncars. Spectators 25c. Eihibilions t ! tomtission Grand March will bt calltd br tes Golchar ef Hollywood. Don't forftt tha DATE AND PLACE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS Friday Ni,ht, August S, MODOC FIELD, Saturday, August 6th. FRIDAY, AUGUST S, I9ijn Heat Wave Grios Nation By THE ASSOCIATED Press Some of the scorched norths, areas of the Midwest got a ,,, cooling but another day of hot , humid weather was the outlook . day for most of the nation The season's longest heat ... held a tight grip on area, from the central md southern Maw eastward to the Atlantic state? The hot wtather continued acrosi the southern tier of states The cooler air which moved ini the Northern Plains pushed south, eastward and the forward ed extended from eastern Lake si, perior southwestward to noruv western Iowa. It was expected to continue to move southeastward la the southern shores of Lake Huron southwestward through exirei i northern Illinois and southern Temperatures In the cooler areas were expected to be mostly in tie 80s. But readings In the go-iu degree range, which have pre. vailed for more than a week in many areas, again were forecast for today. The current heat wave a! blamed for at least 61 deaths, with 20 in Iowa, 19 in Illinois, 17 h, Missouri, 3 in Nebraska and 1 each in Connecticut and Virginia. Temperatures dropped yesterdav as much as 26 degrees in parts of North Dakota from Wednesday! 100-degree marks. The 90-plus readings extended Irom the inter, lor valleys of California im Oregon eastward to the Atlantic coastal and southern New England states. OVERDOSE MANCHESTER, England Ifc-An overdose of aspirin killed Richard J Banner, 32. The coroner said yesterday Banner took the pills be cause of intense pain from sunburn suffered on a seaside holiday. Watch For Klamath Falls Dollar Doyi SOON STATE FARM Your Car INSURES Your Horn ALL THREE Your Lit Sometimes it's smart to put afi I your eggs in one basket ... especially when it's your injur ancc protection. You'll enjoy she . convenience of having ell your personal insurance in the hand! of one person who knows your in. dividual needs. Call me anytime. I It pays to know your i STATE FARM Agent I 709 So. 6th Ph. 3262 Wm. N. Goen Klamath Falls A-