Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1955)
HERALD AND NfcWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 7. 1955 PAGE FTflHT USBR Announces Lease Land Bids; Notes Rulings A schedule of seven bid orjcn Jngs for 195S land leasing has been announced by the local office of - the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. On Monday. December 19, at 10 a.m., bids will be opened on loU s. a, 12 and 13 in Lease Area K, Lower Klamath Lake. These loti are on the Oregon side of the slate line. Four openings will be held on Tuesday, December 20, and Wed nesday, December 21 at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. each day covering 102 lots in Lease Areas B-l ("League of Nations"), B-2 ("Frog Pond") tond H ("Henzel Lease"! in the fu!e Lake area. Lot numbers for each opening are listed in an nouncements available at Bureau of Reclamation offices In Klamath Falls and Newell. Two openings will bo hcM on Thursday, December 22, at 10 ,.m. and 2 p.m., covering 33 Iota In lease Area G ("Southwest Sump") jln ,the Tule Lake area. Lots 1 to ,15 Inclusive are scheduled for the morning opening; lota 16 to 33 In- I Police Hunt The last opening on Wednesday, January 4. 1056, will cover seven lota In Lease Area P. Lower Klamath Lake (Cahlornia) and one lot In Lease Aica N, near thf Refuge Headquarters west of Tule lake. All except (he January opening are for veterans only, with an award limit of one lot to a bid der. The January opening Is open to the general public, with no lim it on number of awards per bid der. If veterans fail to bid on some lots in the Di-ceniber openings, these will be olfercd to the gen era! public at a later bid opening In January or February. Sample leases are posted for examination at the bureau ollices in Klamath F.ills and Newell. Im portant changes from 1055 leases are the renewal options which per mit lessees to retain the same lots for five years, new provisions In 'rule Lake area leases for sep arate payment of the water charge and 3tiicter provisions regarding the handling of drainage water in the "League of Nations" and "Frog Pond" areas. Separate payment of the water rharce on all Tule Lake Sump, pectlve bidders in this area are leases (Areas B-l. B-2, O and Hi cautioned by J. Pitts Elmore, pro i. , nu..ara h..,is th Tule ject manager, to consult the De- Lake Irrigation District may take cember 1655 revision of the area ever irrigation operations in that I map. Copies may be purchased at area before the er.d of the five. year lease period and thereafter water charges will oe paid uj the district. For estimating pur poses, bidders are informed that the water charge in 1050 is ex pected to be about $5 per acre. The exact amount will be an nounced early In 1856 By Issuance of a public Notice. Potatoes or other row crops will be permitted only In Areas B-l and B-2 ("League of Nations" and "Frog Pond"). They may be grown on not more than 25 per cent o! the area of any one lease during each year and may not be grown In the same areas during two suc cessive years. These restrictions are the same as In effect for 1955. Boundaries and acreages of lease lots remain the same as in 1955 except lor lots 3. 4, t and 6 In Area O ("Southwest Sump"), which have been reduced In acre age by a reairangement of Fish and Wildlife buffer-strip areas bor dering the Tule Lake Sump. Pros- PUEBLO, Colo. lfl-The 19-year- id daughter of a Methodist minis ter vanished last night and police fear she was abducted from the rear of the family home. The search for Donna May Upton was spurred by the finding of a scarf believed to be hers on a prairie northeast of here. Police Capt. R. L. Mayber said the pretty hospital student's wrist watch, its bracelet snapped us h in a struggle, v.ns found near an ashpit in the rear of the family's east pueblo home. Mayber said there were Indica tions that Donna May was ab ducted as she was driving her brother's car home from the post office. . . Her disappearance was first noted about 9 p.m. when her brother took the car to a drlve-ln restaurant and a waitress spotted a set of keys In the door. Each member of the family has keys to the car. The brother, Gabriel S. Upton Jr., returned home and learned his father had not seen Donna May since she left for the post oflice. Police said neither members of the Upton family nor neighbors heard any disturbance during the evening. The missing girl, a student labo ratory technician at the state mental hospital here, la S feet 4. weighs about 120 pounds, and has brown hah' and blue eyes. BON BAZAAR TOY SPECIALS! Low, Low Prices Plus '." Green Stamps Musical Tops 59c 98c Heavy Dump Trucks 2" Sonic Jet Plane f ic i,B 1 " Flash Gordon Pistols 39c Battery Driven Toy Autos 1 39 3" Dolls A 'org c"sr,mcn' "'" le" " 15 95 HEY KIDS! Santa Claui will be at Bon Bazaar vary evening and all day Saturday and Sunday! BON BAZAAR 4480 So. 6th Next To Oregon Food A VAVT For the man irho want PERFECTION... The STRAD-O-GAB PIRS If you S hrillinn. D 1 ( lACLcttlOAU J V AMMIH'AVH SIOJiT BKAITIFL'L S ft PORT NHIHT 9 K you want the best In sport shirt gobordinei , , . il l otrad-O-Gob. wont vibrant sport shirt colon in wide selection . . . it's Strod-O- Gob. II you want meticu lous tailoring quality, selected ocean pearl but. ons, perfect collar bal. once, individuolited fit... H'sStrod-O-Gob. Tailored by the mailer shirlmaker Stradivari ... for men uslom.d to perfection. QOO Indmdualiitd fit $! ltnflthlJM7 Colerti OPEN EVERY FRIDAY EVENING TILL 9 P.M. Mi'U ltvi-ihr in , al,ul to v,,sh uur wifr nri Use Our Customer Parking Lot Corner 5th & Klamath Bureau olfices. Announcements of bid openings and maps of the lcae areas are being sent to pov.t-oilices through out the Upper Klamath Basin for posting on bulletin boards. Pros pective bidders who have ques tions as to lease provisions may contact D. E. Bungcr, project ag riculturist, at the project headquar ters. Klamath Fails Airport. Bid openings will be held at the airport offices of the bureau. The room used for bid openings in pre vious years is now occupied by the staff of the Navy construction officer, and openings will be held In other rooms or other builaings p.s the number of persons attend ing may warrant. Persons wishing to attend any opening should first visit the information window in the main office building. Bids may be deposited at that window up to the time of opening. Death Takes William Peck William L. Peck, 07, 01 mamam Fulls from 1944 to 1918. died In Sulem Saturday, De cember 3. While a resident of Xlamath Falls Mr. Peck operated the K Cafe on Klamath Avenue. Mr. Peck was bora in Red Lodge, Montana February 28, 1883. He was married In 1920 In Jack sonville to Elmyra Herbert who survives him. Mr. ' Peck served on the Medford police force for 11 years before he moved to Klam ath Falls. Survivors include three sons, two daughters, one sister, two brothers, ix grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. from the Conger-Morris Chapel with the Fra ternal Order of Eagles conducting the cites. Interment will follow In I he IOOF cemetery. Bar Liquor Sales Okay In Belgium BRUSSELS, Belgium IPi Bel gium is preparing a cautious and tentative legalization of sale of resident; hard liquor in bars, night clubs and cafes. Hie measure expected to be ap proved by Parliament next year would allow liquor to be sold by the drink only during certain hours of the day. If this legislation- passes, Bel gians will be able to buy whisky, or brandy drinks without breaking or evading the law for the first time since 1919. Enforcement has not been strin gent. Many restaurants and cafes openly sell whisky and brandv by the drink and serve cocktails now. RADIO REPORT HONO KONO. lifi British naval authorities here said Wednesday a Peiping Radio report that the British freighter Hydralock was at tacked by ' Chinese Nationalist planes off Paichuan Island was "absolutely untrue." Warm Currents Bring Relief Bv THE ASSOCIATED TRESS 39 degrees. t was 22 at Eau Claire, Much of the central and Western I Wis., as against -12 yesterday, sections of Uie country got a little Freeting and below tempera relief from the unseasonable coldjtures extended from Virginia to today, but It was colder In the j tastern Tennessee, northwestward Eastern and Southen areas. into Iowa and soulhwestward to The warmer air which spread over the mid-continent and the West sent temperatures up to 10 to 20 degrees. The cold air which extended over the Eastern and Southern states, including southern Texas, broight a similar drop In readings. At Fraser,' Colo., Uiis morning it was 23 above compared to 16 be low yesterday morning, a rise of northern New Mexico and most of the Rocky Mountain region. Most of the precipitation was in the Western states. U x A n h a lefc 12 TABLETS lot : WHO IS MR. JAYWALKER SEE PAGE 10 MR. MOTORIST Remember, when you pork your car, you become o pedestrian (A Jaycee Project) RlCKYERS WotKletfaieiftr I T You Can mk Out A-v "rlJi . With tot Just $lf BUY NOW For Easicr Se,ecJlon "ZST' XJtmnjvr mJLJ Greater Variety . . . Bigger Values! REMINGTON "oO" . ,Jc$5gSw: ' ' fJtSsTM 1 Wl Ljjl SisSX electric shaver PI rit STlTO MjBJW K!tLlf I viUuunacHa.1'1' amltbl with char- f rWi 29 Sambas flfr 1 mounlmi. Smut Vfea!' W'Wt Mmt $59.50 ' - - - -il"sT ilfei " Jis- timm& rSM goddess of time MimMt lADT'S I-DIAM0ND IIRTHSTONE RINS urround till U(i Cinttr bltlhltenf. Lortjr otd Metjntini. COMMUNITY SHVERPLATE Hw RmiI iilnralitt I kit nbupl! i lovtiT lm "SntH Sttt ' PUti. U Mil. BOTH LOCATIONS! l.'il'.Il.l".' ,ulov wwm W.r 'Jl"."! S"tttlr Inl . . . Ml ptflrt. Onli t C9mpttDl itwtiat ttnvH ?M- Green Stamps And . Hours 9:30 re 5:30 700 Main Sr. Phone 3151 3860 So. 6th Hour 9 to 9 Ph. 3605