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\ t iPER Published In The ADIRONDACKS ^drionda DA IL Y NBA Full Service Features SIXTY-MBST YEAK VOL. LK NO. 306 THOBSDAY, DECBMBBB 29, 1955 r, PAINTING IKE BUSY FU. RAINS |Key ;West; Ti&. UP) — The sun ] hide-and-seek . behind rain i today and President Eisen ^urned to indoor painting of f Colorado mountain scene. I The President came to Key West i Washington yesterday to up some sunshine and build strength for resumption of, a [ work load next month. He got ; some, outdoor activity — even E a few golf shots — shortly arriving, and that pleased •,: But it rained most of the night, the skies were still* overcast pien Eisenhower gaj out of bed at feS0.a.m. _ } * breakfast of orange foiled egg ,toast and lem got' out his in -the first floor base living quar- out »1 the President ;ed \from a color photograph Summer Colorado mountain !, He got the photograph from state magazine, ivas in Denver that the Presi- suffered a heart attack Sept He had returned the day before __m a fishing trap in the Rocky 2 fountains. Eisenhower activity on govem- » ment business was at a minimum [ today* James C. Hagerty, presi- ], dential press secretary, told news- men he telephoned the White •\House in Washington this morning ' find reported to the President there / was \no work of necessity\ re- ?i( Quiring has attention. p Hagerty said a mail pouch prob- jSe ably would arrive from the capital f tonight. It may include a new draft £of Hie President's Jan. 5 State of the Union Message to Congress. Eisenhower quite likely will work . on that tomorrow. WANT SNOW? HERE'S M FEET little America «P) — The Uni- ted Stale Hag has been raised once i»gam over the desolate remnants ' pf Rear Adm. Richard E. Byrd's f first two camps in the Antartic. Explorers from the Navy ice- l fcreaker, USS Glacier, arrived' here yesterday to find only the tops of ;two radio towers and five other \poles sticking above the snow that buries 4he earlier camps. ' The raflio towers were originally 70 fe«t tail and were erected in 1928 at Little America I, Byrd's first camp. With only eight feet of the towers remaining above the ifiimface, this camp now lies under about 60 feet of snow and ice. Little America H was built on itop of the original site. Five wood ^en poles from the second camp 'now 40 feet below the snow, pro- truded above the surface. In a dispatch from Little Ameri- ca, the New York Times reported •that Adm. Byrd, officer in change of the U.S. Antartic program, flew to his original camp site by* heli- copter yesterday. \I am mayor of this place,\ he was quoted as saying as he jump- ' ed to the ground. \It's good to be -back. It is beautiful, isn't it,\ he added. Weather Many possibilities for weather in the Adirondacfcs. R&- everything from s to rain, snow flurries or will remain mild (\between the 20s and 30s pro- bably), with a drop of a few de- grees by nightfalli E-OWBjKhrushcheVHitsIke UNITED STATES OLYMPIC SKI JUMPERS who are practicing on lake Placld's Intervales jump. They will compete in the 1956 Olympic games at Cortina, Italy. Left to right, Rmli Makl ot bpemtng, Mich., Art. Devlin, of Lake Placid, Boy Sherwood, of East Cannaan, Conn., and Dick Bahol of Iron Mountain, Michigan. Two members of the team* Roger inland of Seattle, Wash., and Willis Olsen, of Denver, Colorado had not arrived today. (Enterprise Photo by Dave Jones.) SEE SHOWDOWN IN JUDGE CASE Batavia (/P) — Western New York Republicans appeared head- ed for a showdown today in their bitter dispute over selection of a successor to the late federal dis- trict judge John M. Knight. The issue came to a boil yester- day when Rep. Daniel Reed of Dunkirk announced he had asked GOP chairmen in 17 counties to meet in Batavia tonight to cast a secret ballot nominating a candi- date for the $22,50Q-a-year lifetime post. The choice seemed to be be- tween Joseph Rubenstem of Dun- Mrk, a-Reed-fevorite, and former Assemblyman Justin C. Morgan of Kenmore. Tonight's will be -the second such meeting to decide on a successor. Reed said \would-be kingmakers\ bad forced -the Republicans to hash over the issue again, Morgan was appointed by Presi- dent Eisenhower last summer, but it was not confirmed before Coi> gress adjourned. It was thought that Morgan would receive an in- terim appointment, but the pros- pect fell through after Reed re- turned from Europe and • dlrd he had not been consulted. The Buffalo Courier - Express quoted State GOP Chairman 1* Judson Morhouse today as saying the meeting would not be binding on the state committee since 13 of the 17 chairmen had voted a pref- erence for Morgan last summer. LP Ambulance Service Available For Interim Reginald Clark of Lake Placid, wner of the Clark Ambulance service, has informed the Saran- ; Lake Chamber of Commerce tat, as of midnight January 1, tus services are available to the ;itizens of this community. Mr. Clark indicated that he was aware of the difficulties of or- ganizing a new ambulance service here and that he would be happy o cooperate in any way possible luring the emergency. Eugene Keough of the Keough Ambulance Service told the Cham- iber that all of has ambulance licenses expire on December 31, •but he said that he and his staff were prepared to cooperate fully i Mr. Clark during the interim period. j The Clark can be reached at take Placid 288 or Lake PlacM 1288,_. . \' Tlie fdur-nja\ii comniattee of the Chamber <joneerned with the am- bulance problem has had a num- ' of meetings and hopes to be able to make an announcement shortly regarding a permanent solution of the problem. Mother Gives Children 190 Aspirin Tablets New York (JP) — A 4fryear-old mother fed her two young sons 190 aspirin tablets last night fol- lowing a quarrel with her husband, police said. But she then franti- cally summoned help when their suffering wrenched her heart. The two children, Bruce Black- wel), 8 and Keitfi, 6, were taken to a hospital in serious condition. They later were reported improv- i said the mother, Mrs Dorothy Blackwell, gave the tab- lets to the children while upset from a quarrel with her husband, Joseph, a Navy seaman, who left home after the firaf. She was quoted as saying planned to take her own \life after the children-died. Elephant For Sale, Bargain Price: $4,995 Philadelphia (#) — Anybody want to buy an elephant? A large department store here has one v on sale for 54.995. \It's a bargain,\ the John Wana- jnaker salesman said, \Hannibal originally cost $7,800 but we re- duced (he price fa line with the store's rWday • Christmas season sale.\ , At this point, Hannibal, whose 14 months and 550 pounds make her just a tot among pachyderms, lifted her trunk and trumpeted. A hush fell among the other animals and visiting children, but the sales, man smiled confidently. \Just think of who you could be if Hannibal was yours,\ he said. • \You would be the only private lowner of an elephant in the United •States.\ \Suppose your garden hose breaks,*\ he added. \AD you havf, to do is set out a dozen pails of water, Then cail on Hannibal to spray your flowers.\ \As for moving furniture or a gnowtoound car. just have Hanni- bal cat her stout head against «nything he»vy and she will push it wherever you want it\ \Of course,\ the salesman ad- mitted, \Hannibal does have a few personal habits that you have to cater to.\ One of her habits turned out to be a hearty breakfast and dinner with Uie day's feeding consisting of one bushel of kale, one bushel of carrots, 10 to 12 quarts of oats and a bale of hay which she al- ternately uses as a bed and an in- between snack. At present grocery rates this would add up to $42 a week. Our sales resistance finally jell- ed, when the man added: \As a pet, Hannibal can last lifetime, living as long as 101 years. And before you know it she will be full grown, a comfort- able 4,000 pounds.\ A department store official said the young elephant was purchased in keeping with the- store pet shop's motto that it handles any- thing from a guppy to a gorilla bul the animal's king-sized appetit< Ambulance Service QUINTS READY TO VISIT HOME Montreal US) — A spokesman for the Dionne Quintuplets says they are staving away from home to prove they want a life of their own, but they will visit .their par- ents' sometime in January. G. Harold Edwards, a trust company executive who befriend- ed the four famous -sisters while landling their Snaneesrsaid they had planned to visit the- family home in Callendar, Ont., for New Year's until their father, Oliva Dionne, charged publicly 1 \outsiders\ were splitting tr away from their family. By going home now they would toe \giving ill,\ he explained. He said the quints \want to make a private life of their own.\ The four surviving quintuplets— Annette, Cecile, Marie and Yvonne —held a small party last ni$rt in the apartment they hav* rented in northwest Montreal. Reporters in the hall outside could hear music and laughter and a young man came to the door Hflien a newsman knocked. Edwards said the young man was an official of the trust firm The quints received more than $200,000 each when they came of age this year. Fattier Dionne was not recon- ciled by reports that the girls were upset at his charges and had de- nied they were breaking away from the family. \I don't regret having issued the statement,\ he declared. \The embarrassment we were suffering over -the separation became great we felt obliged to make pub- lic how we felt about it... we hold no grudge against the quints. The stories out of • Montreal support what we said in the first place — *at the girls are being influenced by outsiders.\ NTT. CLING SCHOOL STARTS One of the top mountain climfbers in the United States who led the -2 Expedition in 1939 to conquer the famous mountain, Karakoram, the Himalayas, will take a spe- al group from the Adirondack Mountaineering School at the Ad- irondack Loj seven miles froit Lake Placid into the rugged Ad. rondacks today. He is Fritz Wiessner, considered > be the American who was losest to ever reach the peak of the. mountain. His diary shows that the exped tion was only 400 steps from the summit of the huge mountain when t had to trun back because a mem ber of the advance group lost the ice crampon which was to be used to cut the necessary steps out of Uhe Ice\. Officials of the school told 1he press Wednesday that Wiessne would lead a party of approxima ely 30 members of ihe School or a 10-mile cross country and climb- ing trip to demonstrate ,the prob- lems involved in negotiating i and snow. The school, one of the few of its kind in the Eastern United States, wiU be in session through Dec miber 30. Red Guns Pound Quemoy For 3rd Day Taipei, Formosa (JP) — Red Chi- na's mainland guns today heavily bombarded Quemoy and pounded an island in the Matsu group where a sea skirmish also was re- ported, official accounts said. The defense ministry said 787 shells rained down this afternoon Quemoy and Little Quemoy across Formosa Strait, in one the heaviest Red barrages of year. It was the third straii prompted the decision to seek a j day that Red guns had pounded quick «afe. |the Quemoy area. i •PHONES i a 921 By Art. Rogers . \The Year, ,The Moment and tohnny Podres\ is Hie heading, in lig, black type. in :a' feature art- :le in today% issue of Sports H- itrated magazine whose editors lave picked the Brooklyn Dodgers' Vorld Series hero as Sportsman- If-The-Year and have given the 'itherbee,' N. Y. lefthander a full picture in color on the cover page. Last year the magazine's selec- tion for the honor was Roger Ban- nister, the British runner who first cracked the four-minute mile. In stating some of their reasons for awarding Johnny their vote for the honor over hundreds of athle- te who performed this past year, be editors of SI believe that the youngster from the Adirondacks provided sport's most rousing moment of the year and its most significant. The leading paragraph df their rtory goes like tiiis: \The .ninfli was Johnny Podres nmng. The anticipation of victory -ode on every pitch. The first bat- ter tapped the ball back to the pitcher's mound and Johnny, pluck- ing the ball from the netting of his glove, threw him out. Hi Yankee Stadium 62,000 people leaned for- ward to watch Johnny Podres face the next batter. He raised an easy Qy to left field and was out. (Fif- ty million or so TV watchers were holding their breath now too.) Thi third man took a called strike, took a ball, swung and missed, took second ball high, fouled one, fouled another. The Brooklyn Dod- ger infield moved restlessly, fid- geting. Podres threw again, a big, fat arr-ongant change-up that the batter topped on- the ground, Afte: half-century of waiting, th Brooklyn Dodgers were tte cham- pions of the world.\ 'Nowhere else,\ the story con- cludes,\ in the vast and wonderful world of sports did such a mom- ent exist in. 1956 as that ot file seventh game of the World Series, Nowhere else did a man do whai bad to do so well as Johnnj Podres did that day. Nowhere else in all the world did sports mean as much to so many people as thej did the day Johnny Podres beal the Yankees. Johnny is due. In Lake Placid tomorrow nigit to be crowned King of Winter with Miss Rheingold of *56 as his Queen. Many from Sara- nac Lake and area wlH be on hand to see the ceremony and more so because Johnny has made several appearances in Saranac Lake dur- ing the past two months. A few ffeeks ago he was the guest honor here at the Olympic Bdbsled Fund Benef t Dinner held at the Boasts of Soviet H- Elks Club NATIVE OF S.L., IRA MM DIES Ira (Pete) Munn died at a.m. today at his home, 13 Winon. ave., following a heart attack. His body will repose at the Keough Memorial Chapel. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at this time. Mr. Miinn was born in Saranac •Lake on January 10, 1902, the son of William and Mary Cronk Munn .He attended school here and for many years was associated with his father m Murai's Grocery Store. He later operated his own grocery business, retiring due to ill health. More recently he was a partner in Pete and Ben's Smoke Shop, located in the Berkely building. The business was sold and is now known as Ed's Smoke Shop. \Pete\ Munn was a member of the Elks afld Knights of Columbus. Survivors include his widow, Beatrice Hannon Munn; four children, Joseph Munn, executive secretary of the Saranac Lake Chamber of Commerce, David Munn, Miss Janet Munn and Miss Margaret Munn, all of this vil- lage, and one sister, Mrs. Anflhony Delahant, also of Saranac Lake. Residents Balk At Vaccine Use In Pa. Harrisburg, Pa. (JP) — The state secretary of health said to- day that some Pennsylvanians are \unwilling\ to use allocated Salk anti-polio vaccine—an attitude that has caused some serum to become outdated and useless. The attitude of some residents of Pennsylvania toward the vac- cine is \apathetic said Dr. Ber- wyn F. Mattison, adding: \There has been a marked con- trast between the reaction of the public which regards the discov- ery of the Salk vaccine as the most important event of 1955, and its un- willingness to use the vaccine now available.*' MAY PLACE IKE'S NAME Harrisburg, Pa. (JP) — State and county Republican leaders were called to Harrisburg today to discuss placing President Eisen- hower's name on (he GOP ballot at the April 24 presidential prefer- ence primary- - ASK CONGRESS MR. PROGRAM OF FOREIGN AID Washington (SO — The Eisen- hower administration was said t>0- iay to. be planning to ask Congress for authority to commit the United States to a 10-year program of economic aid to friendly nations. The sum for any country would rary, depending on the size of the jroject to be backed. A maximum ranging from half a billion to billion dollars is being considered, with the money to be parceled out In annual installments. Such a request would be virtual- ly certain to stir up new opposition among members of Congress al- ready critical of the administra- tion's plan to boost its 1956 re- quest toi new foreign: aid funds to nearly five billion doUars. Con- gress voted $2,700,000,000 tWs year. Without reference to the new long-term commitment the admin- istration is reported to want, Sen. George (D-Ga) said today he be- lieved \there wall have to be a very serious reappraisal\ by .Con- gress of the foreign aid situation. George, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told newsmen in reply to a ques- tion that \sentiment has been growing in Congress to trim eco- nomic aid way down\ since many tree world countries, particularly in Europe, have shown excellent economic progress, speaking, \flvere ha! been considerably more oppositioi to Congress to continued assist: ance for economic purposes to that for arms. than MALAYAN CHIEF BREAKS TALKS Baling, Malaya (£>) - Malayan Oamimmist chief Chin' Peng stalkf ed bajok into tfae jungle today, -on amnesty for his forces to end Malaya's 7% yeans of guerrilla war. But in walking out, the 36-year- old rebel leader offered to end the fighting which has cost 10,000 lives when an \elected\ Malayan gov- ernment takes complete control oJ its military forces from the British now waging much of the fight Britain has promised independ- ence or commonwealth member- ship eventually to Malaya, now protectorate with an elected leg- islature over which the British high commissioner has veto power. Prince Abdul Rahman, chief minister of the federation, will go to London Jan. 1 to begin talks with the British on Malayan In- dependence. Tile Red offer to quil fighting appeared to give him strong talking point. US. BY KHRUSHCHEV Washington (ff)—United States officials were astonished at Nikita Khrushchev's direct attack today President Eisenhower. They thought tills action by a top Soviet leader may mean the development of a still tougher line in Russian foreign policy. Experts here found if significant, moreover, that the immediate rea- son, for the personal attack was a rather routine Christmas message which Eisenhower spoke of prayers for freedom in Eastern Europe. Khrushchev's attack on the President indicates the satellite front is an extremely sensitive one for tiie Soviets. This in turn sug- gests they may be confronted witfr- greater problems of maintaining Gommunist control there than the West knows about in detail. Authorities were not particular- ly impressed; initially by-Khrush- chev's boasts ot rnore power&xl atomic weapons. The propaganda line of a powerful Soviet Union standing confident and powerful in a world of 1 waning capitalism is one which Moscow has been de- veloping with great enthusiasm In recent months — even before the summit conference at Gneva Sutntner, JON rOUBES Sportsman of the Year LP.'S ROYALTY ISWaCOMED Lake Placid's King and Queen of Winter arrived in Lake Placid this morning. Miss Rheingold of 1856, Miss Hil- lie Merritt of New York City, ar- rived on the morning train while Johnny Podres drove to Lake Pla- cid from nearby Witherbee, his home town. Asked by the Enterprise this morning what he thought about be- ing classified 1-A, Podres said that he was no different than any other American and that he would be happy to serve his hitch with the Army and then get back to base- ball. He said he hopes to get in training with the Dodgers in Win- ter sessions but doubts if he will be in Dodger uniform by the time the first game is scheduled next spring. Miss Merritt commented that it was the first time she had been in Lake Placid and that the area was \most charming\. She commented on the breathtaking beauty of the Adirondacks. Both the King and Queen will travel to OJympic Intervales Ski HiD Shis afternoon to meet the 1956 Olympic Ski Jumping Team in one i ENGINE FAILS, 41 ARE SAVED Home (ff) — One of four engines on a big U.S. airliner caught fire and droppfd off over norther Italy last night. An Army colonel' calm assurance to 41 fellow pa& sengers was credited witih avertin panic. The Pan American Airways DC7, I piloted by Capt. Allen D. Reedy of Ridgefield, Conn., turned back to Rome and landed successfully A crew of six and 42 passengers were aboard. Airline officials said Col. A.B Chaffin Jr., a passenger, \did great 30b in keeping everyonj calm. Then after the landing h persuaded his fellow passenger; there was nothing to worry abou and they should continue theii flight to Brussels and New York All but seven continued on anoflh' flight.\ Pan American d:d not knov where Chaffin was from but saic that he is an engineering office] stationed at Tripoli, Libya, vAu recently supervised a constructio; project in Asmara, Eritrea. The U.S. Army officers list say Col. Andrew D. Chaffin Jr. is New Yorker- Wall Street New York (/P) — The stock mar ket made modest progress toda; with trading quiet. Neither the professionals nor th investing public seemed to car much about the market with on): one more' trading day to go in thi calendar year. Prices were up around 2 point at the best, but most gains ^ni losses were quite small. Man; leaders held unchanged for consic erable periods. The pace of business was arour, yesterday's 1,990,000 shares Attach \Crude ' Moscow (JP) — Nikita Khrushahev today acctfeelt lent Eisenhower of \crude interference\ JH ih& affairs Communist nations ,and dismissed bis open skies ion as \nothing more than military intelligence \ He Wasted that the Soviet hydrogen bojnbl \can ho jiderably increased in power.\ At f.he same toe he erii Secretary Dulles as \ advocating massive retaliation, sad absurdities.\ The Communist* Party chief spoke for two hours before the ireme Soviet Parliament \\Some western politicians have a strange idea of the ;pirit,\ he asserted \They want us to disarm our anpy ark lisarm morally and politically \ Khrushchev said he spoke about Eisenhower criUcalty \i •Bltagly\ because he respected the Persident \so (Rdon\ Bu. clared, the President's Christmas message to file pwpj|>of European Communist nations \is quite incompatible with fl» • rJ«tf>! • • . 1 * This reJerqecJ tb.ft message broadcast \by Europe, saying: l '•. \Puring the <Jtatn» want you to know *at tBjfJ can people r^coi d£r which you j you in your concern for 1 ration of individual fn political liberty: and faith that right In me end i vail to bring you once «g the free nations of Sue \ Khrushchev criticized < ell Htariman at I\ ~ similar message. \To pray tor a change ot 1 the peoples' Hey* No Fair! Another Loon Nashvffle, Tenn. (JB) — A. tardy loon was free today to continue its southward journey or fly back north,, after hitching a plane ride here from Syracuse, N. Y. The lfrpound bird arrived on an American Airlines plane last night and was met bV Mrs. Fred Laskey, a Nashville bird watcher. The loon got its aerial assist after it became stranded Monday and nearly starved on the ic< Oneida Lake near Syracue. The creature — which eats fish and must have open water on which to take off — was turned over to Benjamin Burtt, a Syracuse Uni- versity professor and bird colum- nist for the Syracuse Post-Stand- ard' He arranged the plane trip and communicated with Mrs. Laskey, who said she would let the loon go. MORE FIGHTING ON GAZA STRIP Jerusalem (7P) — Israeli troops drove oft a band of Egyptian sol- diers who crossed the armistice line and occupied a \hill on ttre Israel side of the Gaza Strip yes- terday, a military spokesman an- nounced today. During the gun fight the Egyp tians used rifles, machineguns and heavy calibre mortar, the spokesman added. There were no Israeli casualties. The border situation was discuss, ed at a meeting of Gen. Edson L. M. Burns, head of the United Na- tions truce team, and Dr. Walter Eytan, director general of the Is- raeli foreign ministry. The Palestine truce group ear- lier blamed-both Egypt and Israel for delay on U.N. Secretary Gen- eral Dag Hammarskjold's frontier peace proposals but indicated there may be some progress soon. In a communique issued from its headquarters here, the truce group said negotiations were still open and* -further discussions will be held soon on Hammarskjold's plan for establishing peace in the El Auja-Nizana demilitarized arela be- tween Israel and Egypt. crude interference in th* * alfaira of those »—***-\- leads to inciting i armaments tticfe/ _ Ccmpmuiifet 3es4eif> .., bera of ihe Suppe&e I e4 attentively. First Attack On As laf fts JJ&, °t ecall It was 4*>£ majon Soviet leader 1 critical language abi Eisenhower since the su feience in GtneMA; in : -_._ February after <teas%f$L , Khrushchev mm fce made rtjeerte fcfoamib ttofc*! 5S explosives\ He said that although \w« tteWe&|fe«£l over wblch dictated *vre%> t censor tor alter mention was 's Attacked On the Middle past, Khrushchev put forth thesetaitedtons. 1. The Baghdad Pact violated the Geneva . almost before neva agreement ' \mistakingly JiSjdng'her (ate with ttie aggressive Baghdad Pact\ 2 1! g ink on the Ge- CAR TAGGING BILL Albany (.-Pi — Sen. Thomas C. Desmond says he will introduce a bill to make it clearjy legal for a poiceman to tag an automobile parked overtime on a city street h ithout proving O'.vnership of the kd with the desire of Arab rations to win and- maintain independsneei.^^ Jordan is tte atest erarapfr :of 5*» western efforts to involve Arabs \in an aggressiveJmSBtaiyMoc\ 3. \From the- Sret Ay of its existence. •*<? stajs of Israel. has. been taking a hostile, threatening position toward its neighbors. Im- : peri*i«(s are behind Israel, trying \ \ to exploit it against the' Arabs for --, i their owns benefit.\ . ,' Turning to Germany JStausBcfeev -. said Hie actual existence of two. German states must inf-iifMa Into ,, account if the West sincerely - : - wants European t security. The - Western powers' '*po5itiori 'is that the German democratic' republic should join West Germany and > that all its social, achievements should be liquidated,\ he said. \No one will! force us to strengthen by our own hand a Woo (NATO) whkh is directed, against the Soviet Union and other peace- loving countries,\ he added. Khrushchev citeil Russia's re- * turn of the PorWcala, naval base ' <• to Finland, the' Austrian Wk>i«nd- / ence treaty .and the -«cwlyction oijf -. Soviet armed ; teii^S by 844m|0(r men as Soviet c^tiritiutions to re- ducing 3nteraati<3al tension dur- 1 1955. va spirit anid i\ he is undemining the Gene- tng is supporting d t b p ^o p it?\ h asked. We do not seb what the United feates is doing to lessen international tension.\ About To Bd Married, Air Sergeam Killed Pittsburgh W) I\- *\» *•* Force sergeant home on &&ve <|tf** ing which he was tx> b^i jaajtstdjl was killed yesterday ( whan Mi automobile struck a free* S/Sgt Artfiurjr-.Mirtineau, 30. driving north jte 9. The Sn> SO feet, been married ,d Fountain of Mar- •e the expiration ot iave from Iceland* Ht of Plattsbui