Potato Proposal Gains
Support Of Producers
TL'LELAKE - The proposal
made recently by the Tulelake
Growers Association to with
hold from the fresh market
the sale of any potatoes below
the grade of U.S. No. 1, through
marketing provisions, is meet
ing with favorable reaction in
many of Hie potato producing
areas of the West.
Responses have been in an
swer to letters mailed to mem
bers of the potato industry in
Idaho, Washington, Oregon. Cal
ifornia by John L. Coulson, as
sociation president.
The letter, commenting on the
present poor marketing season
with depressed prices barely
covering the cost of. production,
draws attention to the already
established marketing order
which includes the necessary
framework to put such a mar
ket w ithdrawal into operation.
The plan would in effect.
BoxcarBill
Approved
WASHINGTON iUPI '-Legislation
designed to increase the
nation's supply of railroad
freight cars was approved by
a Senate commerce subcommit--e
Wednesday.
The bill, sponsored by 35 sen
ators, would amend the Inter
state Commerce Act to provide
that payments to boxcar own
ers be fixed at such levels that
would encourage acquisition and
maintenance of a freight car
fleet adequate to meet the needs
of commerce and the national
defense.
Sen. Warren G. Magnuson.
D-Wasli.. chairman of the sub
committee and the parent Com
merce Committee, introduced
the measure in March. He em
phasized that it is needed to
prevent serious losses to grain,
lumber, mining and other indus
tries unable to ship their prod
ucts for lack of cars.
He cited recent data showing
that w ith the current car short
age of more than 17.000 per day
eight western railroads have re
ported more than 400 blocked
grain elevators on their lines.
More than 12.5 million bushels
of wheat are on the ground, he
added.
Four young people, two from
Klamath County, took part in a
speeoti contest in Ashland Nov.
4, with first place going to
a .Merrill girl. Lois Hobson. The
seicond county contestant was
Barbara Reid of Bonanza who
took second place. Other con
testants, two boys, were Mike
Charley, Eagle .Point, third,
and Don Cail, Central Point,
fourth.
The annual contest was spon
sored by tle Oregon Associ
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And Other Free Parking
Coulson noted, reduce available
supplies of stored potatoes rea
dy for the fresh market in this
large area of the West, prob
ably by 15-20 per cent. The re
sult would be quality potatoes
marketed at improved prices.
Coulson further pointed out
that such a provision in t h e
marketing order would not ad
versely affect the processors
but would serve to make avail
able a larger than normal sup
ply for starch producers and
livestock feeders.
A still further beneficial re
sult of shipping only U.S. No.
Is, Coulscn continued, would be
the improved appearance of po
tatoes in the retail markets.
With modern day super mar
kets offering quantities of glam
or foods that replace potatoes
in the diet, unappealing d i s
plays of tubers are ignored by
the shopping public. This, Coul
son points out, has been a pri
mary factor contributing to the
drop in per capita consumption
of potatoes.
W ith the proposed change in
shipping rules and the removal
of lower grades of potatoes
from the open market. Coulson
expressed belief that the bene
fits to the producer would be
far-reaching and long-lasting.
Navy Unveils
Model Of Sub
WASHINGTON IUPI - The
Navy has an 18-foot model of a
futuristic submarine that some
day may be able to resist the
pressure of water at the mile-and-a-ha
depth at which the
nuclear-powered Thresher was
lost last April.
Built in The Netherlands at
a cost of $100,000 the model has
rotating propellers powered by
electrical motors outside the
hull. The hull itself is of solid
construction like the gondola of
the deep-diving bathyscaphe Tri
este. The submarine model was ex
hibited Tuesday at the David
Taylor Model Barn in nearby
Maryland. Hydrodynamic tests
are to start next week.
WINNERS Lois Hobson, right, Merrill, took first place
in district speech competition at Ashland recently, spon
sored by the Oregon Association of Soil and Water Con
servation Districts. She will compete in Grants Pass Nov.
14 with winners from other soil conservation districts.
Left, is bVbara Reld, Bonanza, who took second place
among the four contestants.
Merrill, Bonanza Girls
Win In Speech Confesf
ation of Soil and Water Con
servation Districts.
All speeches were on the same
subject. "Woodland Manage
ment In an Oregon Soil and
Water Conservation District."
Winners in five districts will
be in the finals at the Grants
Pass conference Nov. 14. Four
teen hundred young people took
part in the contest.
The J. R. Simplot Company
presented trophies to all four
winners at Ashland.
KLAMATH FALLS
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath
FIRST OF SERIES The Paris Chamber Orchestra is scheduled for the first Commun.
ity Concert series Tuesday, Nov. 19, at Mills School Auditorium. Attendance is by
membership card only. The chamber orchestra has traveled widely in North America
and Canada as well as Europe.
Paris Chamber Orchestra
Will Offer Opening Concert
The Paris Chamber Orches
tra under the baton of Paul
Kuentz is considered the best
chamber orchestra in France,
says the Paris Journal Musical
Francais. This talented group
of 14 young men and women
will be heard in concert Tues
day, Nov. 19, at Mills School
Auditorium.
The concert, open to season
ticket holders only, is the first
of the 1963 series to be offered
by Klamath Community Con
cert Association.
Press acclaim from Europe
and North America has been
uniform in its praise. Thus,
from Geneva: "One cannot ask
for more meticulously controlled
nuances, more carefully propor
tioned balance between the va
rious sections, and n ot a b 1 y
among the soloists;" from Bar
celona: "A profound and rig
orous conductor:" and from
Montreal: "The Paris Chamber
Orchestra demonstrated the
qualities which permit us to
compare it w ith the best groups
of its kind. They have disci
pline, balance, depth, attention
to detail, perfection of style, and
individual excellence of each in
strumentalist." The instrumentation of t h e
group normally consists of sev
en violins, two violas, two cel
los, one double bass, and either
piano, clavichord or organ. To
this basic unit may be added
wind instruments (flute, oboe,
bassoon, trumpot, horn) to
achieve the combinations de
sired to the presentation of
more complex scores, such as
the Bach Brandenburg Concer
tos. Thus, the ensemble main
tains a flexibility and virtuosity
that enables it to perform works
of all styles and periods.
The all-embracing repertory
of the Paris Chamber Orchestra
spans three centuries of master-
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ADMIRAL
RICKOVER:
Our Most Cantankerous
Patriot
In a Navy popularity con
test, the terrible-tempered
"father of the atomic sub
marine" might finish last
but his vigor and vision are
helping America maintain
its military supremacy
a!xve and under the sea.
For an intimate and fasci
nating look at this contro
versial military leader, read
HeeJcly
NOVEMBER 17TH
Feature-Pocked Hsu
with your copy of the
SUNDAY
Falls. Oregon
Thursday, November 14, ISM
works for small orchestra.
From the pre-Bach period are
many beautiful but rarely heard
compositions of Couperin, Le
clair, Rameau and other Bar
oque masters. A perennial fa
vorite with its audiences is its
interpretation of Vivaldi's "The
Seasons." Out of the genius of
Bach come, in addition to the
great Brandenburg Concertos,
The Art of the Fugue and Musi
cal Offering, first performed
by this group in Paris in Feb
ruary, 1961, in a series of six
memorable concerts. From the
classical period come the va
There's a Fuller
Fuller Paint Store - 2899 s. 6th St.
PAGE 7.
ried instrumental concertos of
Handel, Haydn and Mozart,
with Mozart's sparkling "Eine
Kleine Nachtmusik" as a spe
cial treat. Contemporary music
is represented by a large selec
tion of works by such composers
as Bela Bartok, Albert Roussel
and Samuel Barber. Last sea
son American audiences react
ed with particular pleasure to
the atonal scherzo of the young
Montreal composer, now resi
dent in Paris. Andre Prevost,
and to the scintillating pizzicato
movement of Benjamin Brit
ten's "Simple Symphony."
Paint Store near you
mum mm
M-mum
mwM SMILE
FRIDAY I
RlMMAGE SALE. Northside
Garden Club, 8:30 a.m. to S
p.m.. Kerns Bldg., 6th and
Klamath.
LADIES SOCIETY BI.f iE, 7
p.m., no host dinner, pin pre
s e n t a t i o n, Kingfall's Res
taurant. All members.
RUMMAGE SALE. Pente
costal Church of God, 9 a.m. to
5:30 p.m.. 116 S. 31th Street,
rear of Coast to Coast Store.
DAV AND AUXILIARY, 8
p.m., meeting. American Le
gion Hall.
SOUTH POE VALLEY, 8
p.m., pinochle party, Poe Val
ley Community Hall.
YMCA FAMILY NIGHT, 6:30
p.m., politick, family recrea
tion, YMCA. Bring hot dish,
salad or dessert, and table ser
vice. SATURDAY
TECH MATES are holding a
Sadie Hawkins dance Saturday
night 8 o'clock to midnight at
OTI student ballroom. Music by
Wcstcrneers.
"CAVALCADE OF FASH
IONS," lea and style s h o w,
1 p.m., W'inema Hotel. Phone
TU 4-9179 for tickets.
AAUW, 2 p.m., meeting, base
tour, Kingsley Field Officers
Club. Speaker, Col. E. J. Witz
enburger. Members, guests.
LUCILLE O'NEILL PTA. S
to 7:30 p.m., annual ham din
diner, classroom visitation
Big savings on
JTbfrfi Susie twinkle when she gets her full-length
brass-finished Polo Mirror. Adjustable floor-to-ceiling
pole fits anywhere, any room... sets up irt
seconds! Large 16x56 in. viewing area. We've sold
it for $16.95... but it's on sale CJiTVOr'
this Christmas for only ! O O
Save $700
Dad wilt grin from ear to ear when he sees
his own illuminated shaving mirror. It reflects
handsomely on one side, magnifies on the other.
Mom will find it handy for make-up, too. With
built-in light and shaver outlet this chrome-plated
beauty sells regularly for $12.95 CjfvQ K
...but this Christmas it's only... 7LIJO
Junior ran tee, himself as others gee him with this
Fuller High Fidelity mirror. Its plain good looks
go well in any boy's room... and it's genuino
distortion-free plate glass. A full 18x26 inches,
we sell it regularly for $8.95 but c WO
this Christmas you got it for only JjUO
i Krery woman wantt a full-length mirror... give
Mom the very best, a distortion-free High Fidelity
plate glass mirror that easily mounts on door or
wall. It's a generous 16x68 inches so Mom can see
hemlines up close. Complotc with
mounting clips, it's Reg. $14.95 I JjO
but it's Christmas-priced at only J- fV
Larger sizes at similar savings.
school. Movies for children.
KLAMATH LANK LODGE
4S0, VOA, 6 p.m.. annual tur
key dinner, 8 p.m., meeting,
10OF Hall. Members, invited
guests.
RUMMAGE SALE, Sacred
Heart Parents Club, 9 a m, to
5 p.m., Sacred Heart Parish
Hal).
RUMMAGE SALE. Alpha
I-ambda Chapter, Delta Kappa
Gamma, 8 a m. to 4 p.m., old
88 Cent Store.
RUMMAGE SALE, Northside
Garden Club. 8:30 a.m. to 5
p.m., Kerns Bldg., Sixth and
Klamath.
JUMPER GARDEN CLUB.
1 p.m. to S p.m., silver tea,
table setting contest, Shasta
Grange Hall, Shasta Way and
Madison.
BETA SIGMA PHI, 1 p.m..
tea and style show. Winema
Hotel. Phone TU 4-9179 for tick
ets. RUMMAGE SALE. Alpha
Delta Kappa, 8 am. to 5 p.m..
Main Street.
NAOMI SHRINE 5, Order of
White Shrine. 5 to 8 p.m.,
smorgasbord, (Masonic Temple.
RUMMAGE SALE. Pentecos
tal Church of God, 9 a.m. to
5:30 p.m., 116 S. 1'th Street,
rear of Coast to Coast Store.
MERRY MIXERS, 8 p.m.,
square dance, pot luck, Merry
Mixer Hall.
gift mirrors
Council Okays Document
Relating To Press, Morals
VATICAN Cm' (UPD-The
Ecumenical Council gave its
approval today to a document
on modern means of communi
cation, clearing Uie way for the
gathering's first "final" action
on any document.
In separate votes, tlie coun
cil fathers approved the docu
ment by a two-thirds majority.
They still must give one more
vote on the overall document
w hich is certain to be approved
since no changes are involved
and Uien Pope Paul Vi w ill pro
mulgate it.
The decree, which exhorts
"all men of good will" to de
fend the "just freedoms" of the
press, w as debated during t h e
first session of the council last
year.
Chief Of Police
Reprimanded
LA GRANDE (UPH - Police
Chief Oliver E. Reeve was sus
pended without pay for two
weeks and ordered to give up
hunting by the LaGrande City
Commission Wednesday night.
Reeve and three other men
were fined $100 Nov. 4 after
State Police stopped them and
found a cow and calif elk in the
back of their pickup.
The commission's action came
after the police force unani
mously asked it to retain Reeve.
A number of persons spoke on
his behalf at the meeting, in
cluding Union County Dist. Atty.
George Anderson and La Grande
High School Principal Jack
1 Bcch.
is
H proposes to help raise
moral standards in films, tele
vision and other mass enter
tainment media and defines
the Catholic Church's attitudes
towards modern communica
tions channels.
It also says that "special :
care should be exercised to pro- '
test youth from literature and
snows that may be harmful to
their age" and asserts "the ab
solute primacy of the moral or
der" over the "rights of art."
The document notes that the
gathering and publishing of
news has become a very im
portant activity in a complex
world in which tiie "close
bonds between mankind make
it necessary to society and to
individuals to have information
of what is going on."
But it declares that "not all
knowledge is profitable" and
emphasizes that "the communi
cation of news must always be
truthful" and guided by the
spirit of "charity and justice."
"Civil authority should defend
the just freedom of information,
especially as regards the
press," the document says. U
also urges government encour
agement of "culture and the
best phases of art."
CAR WASH
Monday thru
Thursday I w
Fri. anil Sat. 1.30
Optn 9 till 3
Sparkle Car Wash
402S So. Sixth
y
FULLER
PAINTS