Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 18, 1963, Page 7, Image 7

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    HERALD AND NEWS, Klamalh Falls, Ore.
Monday, March U, 13
PAGE 7
f
omnium
Calendar
MONDAY
BETHEL NO. si. Job s Daugh
ters. 7 30 p.m., meeting. Scottish
Rite Temple.
BI'W CLIB, 6:30 p.m.. dinner
and initiation. Willard Hotel. .
KLAMATH CIVIC THEATRE,
8 p.m.. meeting, Spruce Room
Willard Hotel.
TUESDAY
FARM BUREAU WOMEN,
12.30 p.m.. luncheon. Molatore's.
S)eaker on proiwsed school dis
trict reorganization.
'. KLAMATH LLT11ERAN LA
DIES AID. 8 p.m.. meeting.
Klamath Lutheran Church.
DECREE OF HONOR, 7:30
p m., executive meeting, Vieva
, ' " m i urn Jm i m i urn oewn.i u ii w innun xo
Colohan,
1085.
Wocus Road, Rt. 3, Box
WOTM CHAPTER 47, 8 p.m.,
business meeting, Moose Home.
MERRILL WOTM NO. 18, 8
p.m., meeting, Mooschavcn com
mittee serving.
ORION'S. 8 p.m.. meeting, home
of Mrs. Neil McEachern. Bring
white elephant.
WEDNESDAY
RECENT GRADUATES. AAL'W
8 p.m.. meeting, Mary Otteman,
2610 Fargo. Hospital program.
LDS FIRST WARD RELIEF
SOCIETY, 10 a.m.. literature les
son, Herman Melville, Church Re
lief Society Room. All women invited.
Spring Pruning
Fruit and Shadt Trees
Evergreens and Ornamentals
Baker's Nursery
Call TU 2-5553
UNIQUE INSTRUMENT Mn. Robert Schorch, Alturas,
displays the forgotten Ukelin instrument she found stuffed
away in a closet in her home. She decided to look for it
after reading of a similar type of musical instrument do
nated to the Plumas Eureka State Park, which could not
be identified. The Ukelin is played with both a bow and
a pick.
Odd Music Instrument
Found In Alturas Home
ALTURAS Mrs. Robert Schorcliment boasts 30 strings, a set of
of Alturas saw a picture in a
newspaper recently of a unique
musical instrument presented tin
the Plumas Eureka Stale Park in
Johnsville. Plumas County, by
Mrs. Charles Bedell from the es
tate of Nell Brown Thomas. At
that time the state park was re
questing information as lo the
type of instrument that was pic
tured.
Mrs. Schorch remembered a
similar instrument she had stored
at her house and dug it out of an
upstairs closet to compare with
the newspaper picture. She found
that she owned the identical in
strument, but hers had the manu
factured name of Ukelin printed
in the case.
This fascinating stringed instu-
raised upper strings and a set of
lower strings. The upper strings1
are played with a bow like a
violin with the right hand, while
the ambidextrous musician plucks
the lower strings with a pick in
the left hand.
Along w ith the lxw and I h e
pick, which were missing in the!
pictured instrument belonging to
the Plumas State Park, M r s.
Schorch has two books of music
written expressly for the Ukelin
According to data printed on the
Ukelin. the original price was
S40 and it was distributed bv the
Manufacturers Advertising Com
pany of Jersey City, N.Y.
NEW LOCATION -
KUHLMAN INSULATION
1721 MAIN
Call or stop by our "House of Alum
inum" for free estimates on aluminum
siding, roofing, car ports, patios, storm
windows and doors.
NOW! DOWNTOWN BUSINESS
CANOPIES!
Marvin Kuhlr
KUHLMAN INSULATION
Ph. TU 4-7039
1721 Main
Foreman Slated
PORTLAND (1'PH-Rep. Ed
ward Foreman of Texas will
speak March 23 at the biennial
convention of the Young Republi
can Federation of Oregon. He will
speak at 7:30 p.m. at the 1m
perial Hotel.
Ask about daily
"Business Card"
SPOT ADS
TU 4-8111
Soviet Presidium Split
On China Summit Meet
LONDON' 'UP1' The Soviet
Presidium ruling body of the So
viet Communist Party is split on
the merits of a proposed Sino-
Soviet summit conference aimed
at trying to heal the Communist
rift, diplomatic dispatches report
ed Saturday.
The reports said several mem
bers of the Presidium favored
acceptance of the invitation by
Chinese Communist Party leader
Mao Tze-Tung to Premier Xikita
S. Khrushchev to go to Peking
for peace talks.
Khrushchev himself appt area
reluctant, or at least hesitant,
according to the few indications
reaching Western diplomats.
Some members of the Soviet
Communist Party leadership were
understood to favor a meeting
between Chinese and Soviet rep
resentatives to get some kind of
talks going soon and stop the rot
in the international Communist
movement.
Top Level Meeting
Among those believed to favor
a top level Peking conference re
portedly are Mikhail Suslov, the
par ty's ideologist, and A. N. Kosy-
gin, tipped at one time by experts
as a possible successor to Khru-
hchev. i
There w as no confirmation from
the Soviet Party secretariat, lead
ing propagandist L. V. llyichcv
has been mentioned as a backer
of speedy Sino-Soviet talks on a
high level.
The signs were that public de
bate on Sino - Soviet differences
has begun seriously to worry the
Soviet party and political authori
ties in Moscow because of their
effect at home and abroad.
The seriousness of the rift was
revealed by the authoritative
World Marxist R e v i e w this
(week which charged Red China
with calling for the "removal" of
Soviet party leaders presumably
including Khrushchev himself.
Peking has accused Khrushchev
of Trotskyism, which in itself is
tantamount to a call for his oust
er. Indications emerging from So
viet and other official Communist
publications sugge.-ted that Mos
cow would favor a slow-motion
process of Sino - Soviet peace
soundings.
According to tlie reading of
British experts Moscow would
prefer initial soundings by party
ofticials from both sides on jut
tow the conflict could be tackled.
Wants Truce
What Russia apparently wants
first and foremost is a truce that
would quiet Peking for a while
and allow the embarrasing at
tacks on Khrushchev to die down.
Moscow is chary of an all
Communist meeting of all world
parties for fear the Red Chinese
might find support from among
the parties of Latin America,
Asia and Africa.
Instead, the R u s s i a n s favor
either bilateral talks or, prefer
ably, a meeting of the so-called
ruling Communist parties. These
are the parties of the Communist
countries, including the satellites.
whose overwhelming majority is
behind Khrushchev's line.
Red China is cool to the idea.
for the obvious reason that she
would find herself isolated except
for faithful Albania m such a
hearing and exposed to fresh at
tacks of tlie type she experienced
in the recent Communist gather-
is in Prague and Rome.
Terry Baker,
Ike Honored
Pair Survive
Tunnel Crash
PORTLAND iUPU - Judy Mer
rill, 23, Solcm, and Yvonne Men
doza, 22, Portland, were in "fair-
W good" condition at St. Vincent
hospital today with injuries suf
fered in a Friday automobile ac
cident here.
Police said a car driven by Miss
Merrill skidded on wet pavement
and struck the rock wall of a
tunnel on Northwest Cornell Road
m
r til
m f lit.
IT'S A
WOMAN'S
WAR!
SALT LAKE CITY I UPI '-Ore
gon State athlete Terry Baker and!
former President Dwight D. Ei
senhower have been named
group of eight prominent persons!
winners of the 1963 Robins
Awards of America.
The winners were announced by
the group's board of directors at a
meeting here.
iMsennowcr was named winner
in the government category.
The other categories and win
ners included:
Religion: Dr. Norman Vincent
Peale, pastor, Manhattan Marble
Collegiate Church, New York.
Education: Dr. Edward Teller.
University of California physicist
Entertainment: Walt Disney.
tamed producer of animated car
toons.
Industry: Henry J. Kaiser, pres
ident of Kaiser Steel Industries.
Athletics: Baker.
Special Itwol: David Brinkley,
veteran television newscaster, and
Dr. Paul Jonas Salk, discoverer
of Salk polio vaccine.
The eight recipients were se
lected by young men and women
on nearly 125 college and univer
sity campuses in 41! states for
their "inspiration to youth."
The awards arc named after!
William E. Robins, a former stu
dent body president at Utah Stale
University, who died in an air
plane crash in 11)54.
ri: .fit!
if H
0
,4 vv MJd V.-AVS
Equal Pay For Women
Stand Urged By Green
ii I
1 Jk-K
SCIENTIST AT WORK Willard Smalley, a dedicated
young Alturas scientist, works in his home laboratory to
assemble parts for his Science Fair exhibit on the Quan
tum theory. He explains that the Quantum theory is a
study of energy in gamma rays released from various col
ors in the spectrum. He will use solar batteries and col
ored light bulbs for parts of his demonstration.
Modoc Students Ready
Science Fair Exhibits
WASHINGTON lUPII-Top ad-
ministration officials came out
Friday for equal-pay - for - equal
work by women. Rep. Edith
Green, D-Ore., said if they really
meant it they could so something
about it tomorrow.
Mrs. Green flung down her
challenge after Labor Secretary
W. Willard Wirtz and Assistant
Secretary Esther Peterson told a
House Labor subcommittee wage
discrimination against women in
general. They said Congress
should pass a law to make it il
legal.
Mrs. Green said she couldn't
agree more. But she said she has
been trying to get such a law
through the congress for years,
and that at least part of the
problem could be attacked im
mediately by a presidential order.
She noted that the President al
eady has banned job discrimina
tion because of race, creed or
ALTURAS Exhibits covering
fields from the species of pine
cones to he found in Modoc Coun
ty to a demonstration of the Quan
tum theory on the release of
energy will be displayed at the
fifth annual Modoc County Ele
mentary School Science Fair to!
be held in Alturas Friday, March
22.
The Science Fair, which over
the past years has become one of
the most fascinating spectator
displays to be seen during the
year, will again bring together
some 4(H) elementary students
from schools throughout the coun
ty. These students are now work
ing together and alone to build
their projects for display Friday
lfternoon from 3 to 9 p.m. in the
all-purpose room of the Alturas
Elementary School. j
It is an amazing experience to
have one of the seventh graders
explain the function of the cloud
chamber, the use of the atom. I
and the energy released from the
gamma rays and its relation to
the colors in the spectrum.
An exhibit by a fourth grader
may show the basic principle of
electricity, with a display of a
miniature electrical system. Hor
ticulture, biological experiments
hydroelectric projects, and stud
ics of the human anatomy are
just a few more of the fascinat
ing displays the young scientist
of tomorrow will show for the
public interest.
color by private employers in per
formance of federal contracts. She
said by a stroke of the pen he
could add "sex" to this provision.
Wirtz agreed tins was the case.
However, he said the problem of
race discrimination is more ag
gravated than that of wage dis
crimination by sex, and that he
thinks separate approaches are
better. He also panted out that
Mrs. Green's proposed law to
bar wage discrimination against
women would cover a lot more
ground than an executive order.
Some snakes have been known
to exist from one to two years
without food by absorbing their
own fat.
Friday afternoon al 2:30 the fair
will open with the written mathe
matics contest and the written
and oral spelling bee held at the
Veterans Memorial Building. Fif
teen lo 20 mathematicians and
spellers will be on hand to dem
onstrate their prowess in the re
spective fields.
Farmers! Loggers!
Bulk Gasoline
Competitive Prices
TANKS AVAILABLE
CliffYaden's
SERVICE
2360 So. 6th TU 4-3681
OPEN 24 HOURS
CUSTOM
Slaughtering
At Your Location
DAILY SERVICE
Call Anytime
Latest Style
State Licensed
Mobile Unit!
Special Rotes it we
Cur and Wrap
This Week's Special
USDA GOOD
LOCKER
BEEF
Whole or Half A-lt
Cut & Wrapped T lb
GRIGSBY'S
SMOKEHOUSE
Ph. TU 2-0769
Old Midland Road
INCOME TAXES
Seo Your Reliable Income
TAX CONSULTANT
CHAS. HATHAWAY
Auditing - Bookkeeping
120 N. 10th TU 4-S473
YES . . . IN MOST
FAMILIES IT IS
THE WOMAN
THAT HAS TO
BATTLE THE PROB
LEM OF INADEQUATE
MEALS, QUICK
SNACKS & BETWEEN
MEAL TREATS.
YOU ARE THE
U JLaUU
I
WHEN
YOU PUT
VITAMIN
o
ON YOUR
TABLE!
BEXEL BEXEL BEXEL BEXEL
SPECIAL FORMULA CAPSULES MP CAPSULES VHP CAPSULES
IMPROVED FOR CHILDREN maintenance plus Z'Z?:!
HIGH IN IRON CONTENT TINY CAPSULES - SO balanced formula for of both vitamins ond mm-
NEW SMALLER SIZE SMALL ANY CHILD CAN mber of erels ever introduced by
EASIER TO TAKE SWALLOW ' ml1'- McKesson.
a 198 !?? 79 IS? J&9 jo 59
SMI L-, Thon 8c A Day! I ESS THAN 3c A DAY! LESS THAN 3c A DAY! Still Only 9c Per Day I
WHEN SELECTING VITAMINS - LET OUR TRAINING HELP YOU!
m
TONIGHT!
Yes! Starts Tonight
A The
Round Table!
Wilbur Stiles
At the Piano Bar
One of Klamath's most popular entertainers makes his debut tonight at
the fabulous Round Table Room. Come on, join the fun. Have dinner,
dance, cocktails.
Cocktail Hour - 5:30 to 7:00
Favorite Music for Dancing 9:00 to 1:00
Every Night Except Sunday
ROUND TABLE ROOM
OF THE WINEMA MOTOR HOTEL
1111 Main Street
We Need HELP! Right Now! It's
But Were RMOPELIMC,
ovim
Mqvj Merchandise,
ds and Ends at
Excuse our dust but come in and help us make
room by taking away the "Rcdikulus" values!
"Redikulus" Sale going on upstairs and down
through Wednesday. All sales final!
Low, Low Prices Plus "S&H" Green Stamps
HI) A im ITD ffl 61, 611 TTO
PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORES 1
4480 South 6th
Next to Oregon Food