Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 13, 1955, Page 1, Image 1

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    nil Mm mm m
1
I
a1-
r
In The-
Day's lews
By FRANK JENKINS
Yesterday, in Washington, Presi
dent, Eisenhower met with GOF
leaders to discuss the administra
tion's domestic policies. The ad
ministration's domestic policies
will provide the framework of the
platform wnich will be the Repub
lican party's bid for votes m the
Paesidcnlial campaign year of 1956.
The dispatches report that Hit.
1 farm problem GOT TOP BILLING'
l AT THE CONFERENCE. Tile GOP
ji leaders were pretty well agreed
'X that something drasllc will b.ave
to be done to' win the farm vote
! or the Republican parly will be
I in a pickle. j
i
That raises this question:
ilA 1 1 0 DO?
J, L
Several weeks ajjo. Congressman
1 Harris Ellsworth, representing the'
! Fourth congressional district ot '
Oregon, asked himself this same
., iiursuon. iiyiug 10 answer it in-
leiligemly, lie discovered that he
didn't know what ought 10 be done.
I Eo he decided to a,-, it the tanner
ni his district what they thought
.. ooout n.
Ke at.ked them these uucsvions:
Which in your opinion rcpre&entb
...he SOUNDEST agricultural pro
1 gram:
1. High, rigid price supports foi
basic crops coupled wiUi produc
v lion controls?
2. Flexible price t.upporU as ad
ivocated by the present administra
tion? ;'(: 3. NO price supports, permitting
agricultural commodities to find
V their own level in the market?
t
n
' When the replies came in. they
cave him quite a jolt of surpiise.
Here, percentagewise, is how the
Fourth congressional' district farm
scrs who answered his queslion
. na lie voted:
FOR No. 1 13.1 per cent
f FOR No. 2.., -,.39.4 per cent
i FOR No. 3.. 47.5 per cent
That is to say:
ui ine r AKAir-KS who rcpuca p'hii 01 procenure in tne council s
.to Congressman EllsW'orlh's ques- voting. ,
lions, only 1S.1 per cent preier Tsiaiifr challenged Cie Western '
rigid high supports for basic crops, procedure as a "total surrender i
coupled with production contiolsJ t0 the dictates of the Soviet Un
Flexible price supports, as pro-lion"
:posed by Secretary of Agriculture
Bvnson and embodied in the pres.
.cut law, are preferred by 38.4 per
cent.
! NO pniCE SUPPORT, pi-uniting-
agricultural commodiiics to
lind their own level in the market.
Is preferred by 47.5 per cent.
Here's how: the city folks voted-
, KOR No. 1., 6.S per cent
' fOR No. 2.. ....54.3 per cent
' ," FOR No. 3 39.0 per' cent
-f The city people, you sec. are
9 ivmpathetic with the tanner's
plight, and aie alraid he might
v ', not be able to gel alon without
::AKY support at ail. But they
haven't much use for the rigid
staggering surpluses to hang over
the markets of the future like a
dark thundercloud. They KNOW
-that is baa.
. Realizing that the farmer's situa
tion since the war has been a
Jugged one. they are willing lo
pay their share of the cost of
'flexible supports.
: Eut: nearly half of the Oregon
farmers who replied lo Congiess-
nan Ellsworth's questionnaire arc
clear in their minas on this busi
ness of subsidized farming.
i They'd rather take their clwwwe;
in the open market.
. That Is QUITJ3 inlorusliiif.
Recruiters Get
S Appointment
.Technical Sergeant James B.
.SKi-um, U.S. Air Force Ground Ob-
a.cj iuis aeuiur st'i lcwill, u.o.
Nlarine recruiter. Staff Sergeant
Htrold D. Marts and U.S. Navy
Cfiief Petty Officer Larry Cuf
fej. Navy recruiter, were named
rdrrntly as the special events
chairmen for the March of Dimes
muary. by Jay rotei,! i
irman of (he drive.
11(1 Vi
ve wi Ja
county cha
4 planned many events among them
'i c lcens Against Polio section of:
th scbnols of the county. A Scrv
icl Station Day and a Blue Crutch
Df) also will be staged by the
te$n-e jers.
i A Radio Auction staged I.tst
year by the Lions Club will be
held again this year as will the
toe Eicbartsja Clb a S'oOae
ana a shmrshioe ". whiuO
ire sxs&xd bv tA 20.3o Club
sqfisre duncB U tn. eiagwdXw the)'
3 sqOore; (uuace riuns ol tcie roiui.-.
L the Jectal evtaus chairBierf11
sant; ittat , dance i.O be f.tged
,at rhe irmu nA nusip b-o uie
latafrtigoaas. ue lrhe et (his event)
uc vjuioujiateo tf er
r.ilte rhiirman li-oftuft .sntr?
hali ilia Acii 4tiTl lav.nro t . I.
;5)elirnaiWrJ) htn wee fgi ilk, tuei
ionics ja, nc,matB Cotinw Two
thSivirs of the Tn-liV. WfiafJ
hjte .fid Kern re 4dfe8Sifii the ;
oAe HCOO citl's n o
T:e Cooetl' JeAderJ &S 5B
irrsice1 V 4JB- m&vf Men ttacedl
ip)ttftd hecjiff ft h wt:rdj
(MT!vr1Pi
iiSSfL iFBniosa. 6B N'nt'fik
1 Chfi)., .ni.ftil r&j
m confe(Jl tW Wder of
a?Scl0As Tr'Pd" Tuesday nit-atv
an c(dander)(ai(. U45)
(S)(3lc U)(te
fleet tfsl
VT&. Taifl
I'ormosai Defense Command.
Price Five Cents 18 rages
China Blasts
mhership
al to UN
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. IP
Nationalist China Tjiesday blasted
lhe U,N- membership package ileal
as "lilcR nd immoral" and r.p-
i Pe:"ea ' uie security council to rc-
J jeet it.
The Chinese Nationalist dele
gate. Dr. T. F(. Tisang, also sought
lo overturn an upreemeiU between
Russia and the Western powers on
oimg procedure for .;e admr
moh of 18 new members to the
j world organization.
Tsiang spoke as the H-naiion Se
curity Council headed to'vard a
vote.
WITHOUT OEBATE
Without further debate, the coun
cil overrode Tsiang's objections
and approved the voting plui prev
iously accepted by Russia and the
Western powers. The vote was 8
to 1 (China! with the United S'ates
and Belgium abstain;:!';
The council then voied 8-2 to
adjourn until 3 p.m. v;licn voting
was scheduled to begin.'
The Chinese delegate appealed
to all delegates' "to muster
,euouh courage to stand up to the
Soviet Union."
He spoke alter Soiet deleexle
Arkady A. Sobolev had announced
he was ready to accept a Western j
VOTING PLAN' !
The Western 'voting plan called ,
for separate Security Cuuncil voles
on each of the 18 applicants and
then a final vote on of them
as a group. This wouid make It
possible to block the admission ol
all applicants if the preliminary
voting did not satisfy a.l the five
periiianene powers who have the
veto power.
The U. N. Political Committee,
meanwhile, brought the Assembly
closer to its adjournment goal. It
gave a thumping 53-5 indorsement
last night to a proposal to give
President Eisenhower's "open;
sky inspection plan priority in
tle'w dlsalmamet negotiations.
Only the Soviet bloc opposed the 1
resolution sponsored bv the United !
States. Britain. France -and Can
ada. But the continuing soviet op
position emphasized that the long
East-West deadlock on disarma
ment apparently is no- nearer a
break.
THE RESOLUTION
The resolution was expected le
get similar endorsement in the' As
sembly. The Russians opposml it ' on
gounds it falta! is emplwsiae
arms reduction ami preMlMtwa ef
muctoar weapons.
The resolution calls on lhe big
power Disarmament subcommittee
to continue efforts to asree on a
comprehensive disarmament plan
in line ith the instructions ef kul
year's Gfneiil AsxmWy.
It ,,,, tk. oit-ommin a
u urtes the sukcemmittc to
iv priority to the Eisenhower
aJn i5 Snviet Premier B-alt.m-in's
proposal for st.ilionlnc ground
msitc(ion tfms it strateslc cen-
icrs.
Glum delegmes saw little chance
of similar success for the mem
bership package deal although it
already has .the approval of 52 As
sembly delegations.
I
j"T7
, " r- - ."' - '
A JTC
P'.N'. of
(fJTCHglS. Dean Lowell,
P0.010 i-More Mrtet,
'heirwcrk th. morn when
S-ne byt
S)
1 -Jp ''. 1 - . r- ' J
i -71 VJ o Si
's3mstm.tjr. alu, a mW m fjiaaaaaefiaiaaaaaf ,
KLAMATH
THE ANNUAL KIWANIS sponsored 4-H Club pofafo banquet wai the subject of noon
.committee meeting of Robert Kent' (left, seated), director of eqriculture of the Klamath
Falls, Kiwams Club; C. IBuzl Larkin (standing). Kiwanis 4-H potato project chairman, and
Bryant Williams, originator of tha Kiwanis-4-H Club potato project.
More Frigid
Weather Seen
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
December' unseasonable cold
wealher continued Tuesday witli
prospects of fresh blasts of snow-
1 ann arctic-air.
Blizzard conditions were in pros
pect for the Da kolas and parts of
Minnesota.
Below freezing weather extended
southward inu, the cental Gulf
States. It was warmer Tuesday
mo) nm; 'In, some Midwest . cities
man in Raleigh, N.C., and Bir-,
mingham. Ala., wnich reported
temperatures of 22 and 2b de
grees. respectively.
Heavy rnc-.v fell In South Da-
i kota during the night and strong
wl"ds caused considerable a rutins
Nearly one inch of snow fell ir
one hour m Aberdeen. S.D.
A cold wave was forecast for
North Dakota and Minnesota with
s-ub-zero readings, snow and strong
winds.
Severe blizzard conditions were
reported over the Canadian pral-l
l ies, with blowing snow in Alberta j
and Saskatchewan. The storm
headed for Manitoba. At Saska
toon, .the blizzard was described
the worst In prairie history, winds
up te 7S miles an hour were re-
!4-tea in seme areas. Teninora
tuws la-ngcd Irani ze-ra to It ba
ld". Light siww fell in the upper
Mississippi Valley and isoi-ts of the
Eastern Great Lakes region. Shew
ers fell in Florida and along tin
cesi xi tne raciire KoruVweM
" ;"r ln u,e niewnams
v w.. Vn.mi. .3 k. .1.
extended from lh Rockies 10 the
Atlantic Coast In the plains regie
strong souliierly winds in advanee
of a fast-nisving arclic air held
empcr.ituies ln Hie s northward
Into Eastern Nebraska. Central
Iowa and Southeast South Dakota,
Early morning readings range!
from -3 at Cuf Bank. Mit., to a
mild 69 al Key West. fla.
'Vs-?
left, and Dale Young, om-
Eighth and Pine itreeti, paused
the 9 ogiock photographer
V .""3
FALLS. OREGON. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 195S
20th Annual Jenkins Potato
AwardToBe Given Thursday
The 20th annual Frank Jenkins I the Klamath Falls Kiwanis Club
Potato Award will ba presented 1o!and Integrated with Hie 4-H Club
lhe winner of the third annual Ki
wanis 4-H potato growing project
at a snecial Kiwanis banq.Mi at
6:30 p.m. Thursday a-, the Pine
Grove room in the Willard Hotel.
The name f lhe winner .will not
be announced until the banquet.
Special guests at the affair will
e 4-H members and leaders, ana
the parents of 4-H members. .
Jenkins, publisher if the Herald
and N9w...H-1itiated Hi awards
a private venture in 1935. . The
award was offered annually until
1952. In 1953. It was tafeen over by
Plans Ended
Plan nre nnu fnmn1i Iai- m.
concert to be held in Pelican Court
on Friday. December 16. to help
send the KUHS marchliifr band op.
us way to tne Shrine East-West
game ht So Fraaclsce. As a me-
ciai leaiure ei int aenceri tne Bar-
uci-uup innius m o memaars.
under the direction f Jain ibxis
tn, will pcevitre a 9 mlnata uro
gram, seports are Iliac their Pes.
entatkm for this eonoort will con-Oregon California Potato Commit
lam much imw ami eomedv as lea.
wall as the ckei-us and the well-
knwwn selolst, Jed Murphy. I fUNaHr , , .
In fHMitie te the pan ptayai Mi 1 i fill 5MOPPING
lh KUKS BwmI and BarbQl-ili-,) ! I I I I Ef "
Cheru.i. the A Canptlla Choir and 1 I 1 1 If f A VC I CCT
tb9 KURS STUphMT Orcbvstrs : L.IJeBSkl ' LCT I
ill contribute a short pnwram ,. ,
No adinlsslen will cbei-gea: r- Help FlMt TB -1
fni- H , , .
"- i ' in rmnB loul l
Deewi- K3, ht'ccorelin ta An
w Lwht Jr., vehmtery cojitri
kutiims urtll be received, tha an
tire precetajc to ge towards financ
iir tVa trn f fel .rjs Bnxat te
tbs Bts-Wawt aan.
Bond fund
l.T. diirtW
rawn adwathm 6x trie -av
wlni I.B. laania J halu. nUat
We foJfrMvtar fiiHrei ain taeOvi!-
imas nave criaew m mr
fund to serai Ha Knfltn 4'rdan
UWV Srtmwi rra to tr- tw
Vmm Mrrimi Ks.w aviret ti
Son Fraairlnao:
Klama4h Lumbar and e'o.
Morrison and Ifewiird, At
chiteets. Ralnh MacarlnfT.
First Federal Savings a (fc
Loan.
Medo-Laivf CfawrArr,
.Shrine Drum aafti ,,,h,.
Ktamo yiMtivil Clin
LaPoinaa'a.
Kaanwon Liaatlaie
. First .Vatnrail muOSt
Fred fk-vw-iaaaa-,
C'het Laitsj. o
Weisrield'a, . O
Oregon U'atar ( ap.
Kei and Art fie, NO
nick Reeder'a.
Weyerhaeuser 1'Qcf tio.
Shoop and Schule,
Modoc Lumber I n,
Robert Dunl.p.
Mrs. W. E. Lamm. O
The Town Hhop.
J. C. Penney Co,
International WnndtmrLap. -t
Amerira, Loral 6-ja.
Idwln E. Ilrlornll.
(iust Lampropulos.
Howard K, Perrlu.
iuide Printing Co..
Nhaw'a Stationer;.
Cascade Home Furnishings.
Flovd A. Bo.i4.
G. t'.lotle.f. Plumbing.
Townn4 CounlrT Village.
' JToUI . . , J951
potato projects.
nro!eey?,,Sl.33 .V,,''1cilW"l,1 ln Um! '
project maiks ti e largest group ,
to ever vie ior the prize, accord
ing .lo . Kiwanis officials.
In addition to the grand prize,
prizes will be presented to winners
in each club. Overall prizos also'
..... or wicreq ior tne largest yield
ui jvoi i s per acre. Hie larn-
,!' percentage) 'of Mo. an, the!
best- record nooks.' -cT record
bOOKS are the SOecinl A.'A l-nrri.
kept by each club member on Ills land University, 8313,100: Lewis
project.) . r,nri cinrk. S277.800; Willainotte.
In an effort to build the Kiwanis ' 8218-600: Ma rj ihurst, 8172.6O0; Lin-4-H
ChA petato awards inio a na- "eld- 8171.200: Pacific, 147.400;
Mal event, the Klamath Palls Mount Angela Waaiaw's College,
ciwj issued challenges to clubs inis-ii.iuo.
othr-r potato growing areas, but fdaho College af kteho, S106.3Q0;
received only one answer Tliis 1 Northwest Nazareaie. $fi"i,2.
waS from the Tulclake club, which !
recently presented Its polnto proj
ect awards.
In addition lo tne csrtiilcates of
award. substnntlHl cash and other
prh.es are given.
Kiwanis Club members aiding I
the operation of the contest are I
Bokert Kent, member of the board
directors: C. iBuzi Lnrkln
chairman of the club agricultural
committee, and Bryant Williams.
local rancher and chairman of tin-
I
,1
tt Bha rnaimaja ? r.anmuci tfttt 1
ADDRESSING MARCH DIMES advance gift tten to every home in Klamath County it a
big job that the Tri-Hi-Y clubs of KlamaQ Union High School are doing thil week. Eitiline Kiq
er. left, and Sybil Meedor report on their progress to Jay Kokih, eeity chairman for this
year's March of Dimes drive which will be kicked tff A Janifary 2,
o 1
Telephone 1111
. .
No. 3351
Vest States
Obtain Huge
Ford Grants
NEW YORK '.f - Twenty col
leiies. and universities in Oregon
Wnrhiuirion and Idaho are allocated
33.801.900 In grants announced
Monday by the Ford Foundation.
The Northwest educational grants
Hie part of 500 million dollars In
guts to schools and hospitals an'
nounced by the foundation.
Individllul hrmnilalc vm 1a .
crive notificalion of their grantB'
during the day.
In tne Northwest, 10 Washington
ichools are listed for il.iTl.aoO:
8 Oregon schools for 11,741,800 and
2 in inaho lor S187.500.
The half billion dollars for schools
nnd hospitals is the largost single
gut in tne History of philanthropy.
Of the total. 310 millions Is enr.
marked ior 615 colleges and uni
versities, it ts to help them raiw
teachers salaries. All the schools
are privately supported instltutions.4
ine largest single grant Is t mil
lion dollars for New York Univer
sity. Harvard Is listed foi 4L. mil
lion, the University of Chicago for
over 44 million and Yale lor 4
million.
The announcement said -the In
come from the grants Is to be used
tn increase faculty salaries. Every
lour-jcar privately nnanced col
lege and university In Uie country
is included. The amount for 'each
was determined by approximately
matching its payroll for instruction
in the 1054-55 year.
The largest Northwest rrant was
lo Seattle .University, S432.900. and
the second largest to Reed College.
Portland, $391,400.
The foundation reported the grants
to both Roed and Whitman Col
lege lnoAided extra sums because
oU were leaders m raishW
teachers ealarles
The grant by states Included:
Washington Seattle University,
M32.K0: Seattle Paolfio, (102,500:
Whitman. S'.MB.ftM: Wftlla. Wall
College, 1128.300; College of puget
sound, 81B4.H0O; Pacific Luthari
Gonzaga, $'108,100: Holy Names
Collese,-8l00; WbltWQrtq;. JU41V
, 700
nrPUnn RaaH tlOl dfiA- rt-
River Contract
Delay Asked j
YREKA, Calif. Ml The Slsai
you County Board of Supervisors
Monday night asked delay in ap
proval of a contract for construc
tion of Klamath River hydroelec
tric dams by the California Oregon
Power Co.
At a hearing of the water sub
committee of the Assembly Com
mittee on Conservation, Planning
and Public Works, the Siskiyou
board urged that the Federal Bu
reau of Reclamation hold up sign
ing if the power comract.
The supervisors asked 'that a
regulatory dam on the Klamath
be authorized before the power
companv could ' proceed. They
asked also assurance that Klam
ath River water sunplv be ensured
I in the Shasta Valley and In the
lower KtHinath region.
Former Bonn Police
Chief Eludes Reds
By BRACK CURRY
BONN, Germany tfi Dr. Otto
John, the notorious German turn
coat security chief, baa returned
to the west.
The West German toverninent
announced Tuesday that the debon
air "man of a thousand secrets"
who deserted to Communist East
Germany Is months ago surren
dered to West German security po
ne. ;
German sources said he crossed
into West Berlin Monday and was
nown secretly to west Germany
uie same attemoon.
He Is being queslioned by the
prosecutor 01 the West German
Supreme Court, a terse announce
ment added.
Where he Is being held and how
he eluded, the Communist police
was not revealed. It was known
here that the East Germans sus
pected he might be planninj to
flee back to the West and had nut
mm unaer constant surveillance.
His escape westward therefore'
may have Involved considerable
nt'nu't5' on !,,s P,rt-
When Chancellor Konrad Ade
nauer told a meeting of his coali
tion government's parliamentary
leaders that John was back in
West Germany, they roared with
laughter.
He bolted to the Communists on
July 20, 1954, the 10th anniversary
of the bomb plot putsch against
Hitler in which he and his brother
played prominent parts.
John's flight was postwar 'Ger
many's greatest security scandal
Rueful Allied ofllcials admitted that
he had turned out to be Russia's
master Oerman spy.
Two months before he crossed by
night into East Berlin he had dined
in Washington with Allen Dulles,
director of the United States's top
kecret Central Intelligence Agency.
For 10 years he had curried favor
with the Brilish Secret Service.
DIRECTOR
John, 48, had been director of
West Germany's Office of Protec
tion of the Constitution. Its mis
sion was to ferret out and expose
Communist and Nazi plotters in
side the Bonn Republic, work di
rectly connected not only wits the
security of the West German Re
public but also of the 400,000 Al
lied troops In the country.
Altar he Joined the Communists.
Jehn charged that Chancellor Ade
nauer s government was reviving
nailsm and militarism. He said the
"only lorum" he could find to com
bat ihl. trend waa ln the Commu
nist. East, ..
He had baen reported living in
Potsdam, wrltlna his memuirs and
editorials for Communist publica
tions: .
After his spectacular defection to
TETUAN, 88lUl Mwae t,-
fix-anlsk bawtr kmrwIs say- aU
elpht airmen iJwi V. S. miU-
tay transport pTm vtvt kirhni
when the enrft hit a l.Wi-Htl pml:
In the rucgen Ricf Mfunian aanl
exploded.
The pleie wm a feMr-anutar
C54 of Uie U. S. Aw- I'arce'a I'M!
Air Trilisaar-, Oaoua, lansed t
Kelly Field, Sua A-aMnia, Tex. Tae
transport. cri rawy l w
the Gowiora district, inr Ike kvr-
der belwewi Fiie ewt SgKxmto
Moracca.
Flying from Mheelus Fa-li la
Tripoli to Cfaklawi. it was be
lieved en route te tier. Vetted
States.
Spanish authorities rejorti Ike !
accident lo U. 6. Air Foa-ce eaii-
cials at Rabat, Fi-feich NVorecce,
yesterday. The Spemaa-ds Ki thr
eight bodlej were being set te
the Sidl Sllmane air bx.ie inoir Ba
bat, French Morocao.
- Spanish technicians wlea exam
ined the wreckage said the plaife'
iltlmeter must have been out of
order.
the East aermans. Allied intelli
gence agents concluded that he had
been leading the life of a double
agent for years.
However, Dr. Carl Wiechmann,
West Germany's chief federal pros
ecutor, said last year after an ex
haustive investigation he was con
vinced that John had deserted to
the Reds in a spur-of-the-moment
decision.
Landry Cites
Urgent KF
Sewer Needs
An expenditure of approximate
ly saiO.OOO for additional awage
facilities will be a "must" in the
near future for Klamath Falls.
Mavor Paul Landry told the City
Council .Monday night.
The mayor made this statement
after the council decided to an
nex the Sunnj land subdivision near
the housing project which was
urged in a petition presented bv
E. M. Chllcote and 31 other resi
dents of the area.
The council also was asked for
Information concerning Its plans .
for sewer expansion by Wal'er
Haye.s. representative of nersona
planning to develop a hauslng area .
in MnLoughlin Heights.
HAI'lII t.KOVlTII
Major Laudty said rapid growth
nf the city will make it necessary
lor thr city to float a sewer bond
issue which will have to be ap
proved by the voters.
Tile council Monday night also
agreed to grant the Klamath Dis
posal Company a 10-year franchise
for handling city garbnge. Under
the . franchise, lhe -company will
pay the city "00 during the first
two years of the agreement and
two per cent of ius gross In
come during the remainder of the
period. It was decided to extend
the present franchise so days lo
allow City Attorney Henry Per
kins time to prepare an ordinance
covering the new franchise.
Spearheaded by Counctlmen
Lawrence Sinter and Walter Fleet.
the city policy of refusing to an- -prove
1956 licenses for business
firms until it had been certified
they have complied with the new
txarbage ordinance waa ordered
continued.
COUNCIL, Itl Fl SAL , .., ',.
The council refusal to approve,
some. 611 business sep'pllcVrtiurW -rm"-tll
garbage ordinance compliance
la certified by Clly Sanitarian Law
rence sirader.
'lhe council also voted- fo hold
up a wrecking yard license re
quested by Roy Call until he haw
cainplled with an order from llm
cannon ta wmove old auloinohlles
the boat of his establish-
mftif.
After hearing a report from
CnueallMan Slater on a meeting '
H by law onterconient agencies
pr autia) distributors. City
Attorney Perkins was Instructed
hi ee-ati. na aeweencd car yd.!
soate. Uarirr tlr proposed ordinance. ,
tie" city will defray the evpense
of li-nidloat wnajinoblles abandoned
wlt:nn corporate limits and con
duct moattaly sales to dispose of
tbr tU cars
v- Landry -gave a report on
bis raaent trp lo Miami. Florida
wtae be attiil the annual con-
venleai lhe American Munlcl-
pnl -As:,action. H.i said hn nb-
janad cleat deal of valuable
Meraietn.1 ahich will aid In clly
anau.g.
1 '''' CH f
CoiiB:Umn Fleet cnllrd. ntten.
tiow ( Uie fnc l (hfti mtmiclpnl
rwoitfo are not kept, In (Ire ptool
vhiiIUs. Tl council followed b.s
rnQiigofAiBw UirL a .survey houk!
be mauc t once and obsolete
records be deleted.
The council decided to empluyy
Rrmlnnton Rftnd Company make
lhe survey. It Is possible that mv
portani city records may be put
cn microfilm.
City EiiKinee: E. A. (Tnxii
Thomas repoi led thai (he clly al
ready Iia.s spent $4,700 of the
$9,000 budgeted this year Ior snow
removal.
rOUlX'.VST Klamath Kalis .oid
virfnltv: 1 iiir Tuesday nijjht a nil
VednO-.d.iy. Illch s Wedncsda).
Low TiirMliiv nipl.t
llith yeNteroay A '
l.vw Usl nishi 2'.'
Preclp. last M h-iiiM . . 7
P reel p. since Oct. 1 .?.0v
Same period last ear ............. 1L
Norm h I for period . , 3.5:'
SHOOTING HOURS
. OREGON
December 14
OPEN CLOSE
6:S7 4:35
, CALIFORNIA
December 14
OPEN CLOSE
6:58 4:35
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