Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 17, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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    HOLIDAY CRAFT IDEAS nt.reit.d women in the
community, as well as Camp Fire associates, will have
an opportunity to learn many festive decorating ideas
for the Christmas season at the Camp Fire-sponsored
Holiday Crafts Workshop on Nov. 20. Included on the
agenda will be demonstrations of various paper, nature,
metal, and plastic crafts. Admiring some of the finished
products are two of the instructors, standing from left,
Mrs. Elwin Brown and Mrs. 0. W. Goakey, and seated,
Mrs. George Allensworth.
Crafts Workshop Planned
For All Interested Women
The Camp Fire organisation
will conduct a Holiday Crafts
Workshop for leaders, assistant
leaders, sponsors, and all inter
ested women in the community
on Wednesday. Nov. 20.
The sessions are scheduled
from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
First Presbyterian Church, 601
Fine St.
The workshop w ill include the
instruction o( paper craft by
Phyllis Goakey; nature craft by
Sally Wood; metal and plastic
craft by Erma Barker; and spe
cial crafts bv Nanette Brown.
UNICEF Holiday Cards
Can Be Ordered Now
With Christmas a few short
weeks away, those planning to
send the beautifully-colored, un
usual UNICEF (the United Na
tions Children's Fund) greeting
cards to say "Merry Christ
mas," should place orders as
soon as possible with the Peli
can Cafe.
UNICEF cards have become
a tradition with millions of peo
ple who choose these "collec
tions of art by famous names"
to aid children around the globe.
There are many designs to
choose from depicting many na
tions. In addition there is a hand
somely inscribed 1964 calendar,
another collection of art, con
tributed by some of the most
renowned artists of the century,
and two charmingly illustrated
books, "The Wonderful World
of Clothes," by Ruth Gelarie
Fox at 50 cents and "The Chil
dren Come Running." by Eliza
beth Coatsworth at $2.50.
A UNICEF game, "Lingo." is
all about foods, dairy products,
fruits, vegetables, for 2, 3 or 4
players in English, French and
Hams Plan
Test Alert
The Klamath Five-Wattcrs, an
organization of local ham radio
operators, will conduct a civil
defense test alert over radio at
27 megacycles. 7:30 p.m.. Mon
day, the group reported Fri
day. About 300 radio operators in
the county have radios
equipped to pick up the special
Citizen Band station, it w a i
said.
Headquarters for the test
alert will be in Room 205 of the
main building at Kingsley Field.
Shop
Today
9 o.m. - 7 p.m.
Al Store No. 2
South 6fh &
Shosro Way
OPEN TILL
MIDNIGHT
Monday thru Sat,
All Grocery
Specials from
last Thurs.
ad good thru
Wednesday!
MARKET
BASKET
til ni Pin
. 4H enf Shalt War
Grace Whitman will give a spe
cial demonstration.
Those attending are request
ed to bring samples of their own
holiday craft ideas to share; two
cans of different sizes; a light
weight glove for the left hand;
a bag to hold the articles con
structed; and if possible, phea
sant feathers. Everyone is also
to bring a sack lunch. Coffee
will be furnished.
For further information or res
ervations contact Mrs. Richard
Lamb, TU 2-5336, or M r s.
George Allensworth. TU 4-7147.
Spanish, an cxicting way
to
learn a new language.
In announcing the repeat
sale this year of the items that
have been, so popular in t h e
past, Mrs. E. A. Geary, local
chairman for UNICEF, reminds
the public that tlie money goes
to help children of all races and
creeds. There are millions in
the world today.
The various items, cards,
game, calendars and books are
on display in a window at the
Pelican.
Bureau To Host
Get-Together
BONANZA The Bonanza
Farm Bureau Center will spon
sor a "gct-acquainted-with-your-teacher"
night on Wednesday,
Nov. 20, in the Bonanza High
School cafeteria.
A potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
will open the program. Those
attending are requested to bring
a hot dish and salad or dessert.
Coffee and rolls will be fur
nished. Members of the food commit
tee are Maren Randell, Maxine
Brown, Christine Hankins, and
Erma Totell.
CONDEMNS SEGREGATION
GENEVA (UPIl The gov
erning body of the International
Labor Organization ULO
formally condemned South Af
rican racial segregation Friday,
but postponed action on Afri
can delegation demands the na
tion he expelled from ILO.
now ... )
is the ideal time lo have your child's I P0.,,'"-y oot '" o f
eyes examined. Or. Noles Optometrists , .00o '
hove i.rv.d the fomili.s of the Northwest Pwfn thym,
for over SI years. No appointment ". v ,0 lhnu " J
Gangs Eyed
In Portland
PORTLAND il'PI'-The Met
ropolitan Youth Commission
was w arned Friday that the
Portland area faces an upsurge
of juvenile gang activity with
racial undertones.
Portland Police Chief David
Johnson made the report at a
special session of the commis
sion. Multnomah County Sheriff
Donald E. Clark said there
were indications the county
would be faced with a similar
pattern.
"Gangs of juveniles seem to
be taking advantage of any op
portunity to create a situation
where it is unsafe for a person
to walk down tlie street," John
son said.
He added some of (lie gangs
"have the avowed purpose of as
saulting individuals of the op
posite race."
Members of the commission,
as well as school officials, po
lice and leaders of the National
Association for the Advance
ment of Colored People, agreed
that removal of the leaders
from gang activity would aid in
solving the problem.
They stressed the need for
more money to aid in rehabili
tation of "hard core" offenders,
and suggested the community
initiate and support a youth
work-study-vocational camp.
AEC Stages
Another Test
NEVADA TEST SITE UP1-
The Atomic Energy Commission
(AEO Friday brought its total
of underground nuclear tests to
100 since Sept. 15. 1361, when it
detonated its second blast in
two days.
The explosion equal to less
than 200.000 tons of TNT was
similar to the low yield shot
detonated on Thursday. Neither
blast was noticeable in Las
Vegas, 65 miles to the south
cast. The United States resumed
testing at this remote desert
proving ground on the 196.1 date
after a series of nuclear explo
sions by the Soviet Union vio
lated a three-year moratorium
on such experiments.
It was the 19th announced
U.S. test this year and the ninth
since Aug. 5. 1963. when an in
ternational agreement banning
atmospheric, space and under
water testing was signed.
Auxiliary Head
Visits Chapters
Mary Wells. Veterans of For
eign Wars District No. 5 Auxil
iary President, visited several
VFW auxiliaries on official busi
ness recently.
Her itinerary included Pais
ley Auxiliary No. 9746, accom
panied by Sophie Alandclla, De
partment Chief of Staff; Nov. 7,
Pelican No. 1383 where .Mrs.
Wells is a member; Nov. 12,
Malin No. 6147, accompanied by
10 members from No. 1383, Alta
Thompson, Vera Chase, Joy
Gunthcr, Joyce Baldwin, Ella
Garrett, Sophie Mandclla, The
resa Allesch, Marie Kilgorc,
Charlotte Canoy, Norma Wal-rath.
Famed Conductor Dies
NEW YORK (LTD Fritz
Reiner, 74, who fulfilled a boy
hood dream by becoming one of
the world's leading symphonic
orchestra conductors, died in a
hospital Friday of pneumonia.
Among Reiner's great accom
plishments was his success in
raising the once-mediocre Chi
cago Symphony to a position o
eminence in the classical music
world.
Reiner joined the orchestra
as director in 1953. Within a
few years it was regarded as
the second best in tlie nation,
just behind the Philadelphia
Symphony.
Did your child receive
a Blue Slip?
Was yours one of the youngsters whose
eyes showed need for help in the
recent school examinations?
necessary,
Convenient Crtdit
out Sf (A
COLUMBIAN
730 Main
Drs. Omar J.
Noles
Flu Cases
Increase
In County
The number of cases of in
fluenza in Klamath County dur
ing the week ending Nov. t in
creased to 37 from 13 for
the previous week, as large in
creases in the incidence of the
disease became generally not
ed in large areas throughout the
state, the Oregon State Board
of Health has reported.
Statistics show that 613 per
sons in the state had contracted
the disease as of the week cov
ered by the report, repre
senting an increase of some 120
over tlie previous week's 493.
Portland led with 78, followed
by Clackamas County, 57; Polk
County 50; and Malheur Coun
ty. 47. Klamath County was sev
enth. Four other cases of communi
cable disease were reported in
the county during tils same pe
riod and included three cases of
German measles and one inci
dent of pneumonia.
The breakdown of cases of
communicable diseases in coun
ties adjacent to Klamath Coun
ty follows:
Deschutes, 6: Influenza, 4:
pneumonia, 2. Jackson, 13: In
fluenza, 13. Josephine, 25; In
fluenza, 19, staph, inf., 3; scar
let (ever, 2; pneumonia, 1.
Lake, 7: Influenza, 7.
Crash Kills
Oregonian
Columnist
By I'nited Press International
Robert Keith Walters, 29, en
tertainment editor and columnist
for the Portland Oregonian, was
killed in an early morning auto
crash in Portland Saturday.
A passenger, Joan E. Fletch
er, 29, of Portland, was listed in
satisfactory condition at St. Vin
cent Hospital. She suffered a
fractured right ankle, head In
juries and a leg injury.
Portland police said Walters'
car struck a power pole and
veered into the side of a rail
road boxcar. There were no
witnesses to the crash. Walters
was pronounced dead on arrival
at a hospital.
He came to the Oregonian in
I960 from the Medford Mail
Tribune, and before that had
worked for the Humboldt Times
at Eureka, Calif., and a Japan
ese news agency. He was a na
tive of Jackson, Ohio, and at
tended Ohio State University.
Walters was one of two Ore
gon residents killed in accidents
late Friday and early Saturday.
Mrs. Bcih Bates. 31, of Nyssa
was killed in a three-car acci
dent six miles east of Caldwell,
Idaho, Friday night.
Nine other persons including
her husband, Don were in
jured. Annthony McCrcadie, 28, Ros
common, Mich., died at a Mc
Minnville hospital Friday after
noon from injuries suffered
when the car he was driving col
lided with a truck on Stale High
way 18, 25 miles southwest of
McMinnville Nov. 5.
A heart attack in 10 cur
tailed Ns work with the orches
tra, and he resigned h i post
two years later. He had planned
to celebrate his 75th birthday
next month with a four-week
engagement with the Chicago
Symphony.
Reiner, born in Budapest,
Hungary, studied law at the
urging of his father. But his
mother, an amateur musician,
apparently had a stronger in
fluence on him. He began study
ing the piano at the age of 6,
and by the time he was 13 he
had decided to become a con
ductor. We give Z?K Greet Stemes
yevtt
OPTICAL CO.
TU 4-7121
and Robert Peters
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath
j Ml
: J
SALUTE TO YOUTH The Optimists of Klamath Falls sponsored Youth Appreciation
Week Nov. 11-17 to give the "95 per cent of America's youth who never get into
trouble a pat on the back." Six young people from various local organizations, repre
senting all youths in the community, were honored at an Optimist Club breakfast meet
ing on Nov. 15. Pictured from left are Chuck Sweetland, YMCA; Danny Mitchell, Ma
rine Corps Devil Pupi; Joe Durrell, Boy Scouts; Lynn McCoullough, Camp Fire Girls;
Conny Coddington, Girl Scouts, and Sandy Woodard, 4-H Club.
Shooting In Korea Called
'Act Of Murder' By UN
PANMUNJOM, Korea UPI
The United Nations charged
today that the killing of an un
armed South Korea captain in
the truce zone Wednesday was
"an act of murder." The Com
munists denied llicy were to
blame.
U.S. Army JIaj. Gen. Robert
F. Scedlock, chief Allied dele
gale to the truce Commission,
demanded punishment of the
North Koreans responsible for
the shooting-up of an allied bor
der team in which the Korean
captain was killed and an Amer
ican enlisted man was injured.
Seedlock said the Allies have
produced "irrefutable evidence"
of Red guilt in the shooting,
which pinned down the allied
team on the banks of the Han
River for hours.
PENNEY'S
ALWAYS FIRST
VuHr7Lk LA. 1. s iJ4w 6 ? Ul 4 1J!
I
Falls, Oregon
Sunday, November 17, 1963
The charge was leveled at a
3-hour-and-17-minute meeting of
the truce commission in this
border village. The meeting
proved fruitless.
North Korean Army Ma. Gen.
Chang Jung Hwan, chief Red
delegate to the commission, de
clared that "our side was not
involved" in the shooting.
"However hard you may try
to support your allegation, no
one will believe it," Chang said.
"It is foolish for you to try to
gain some profit by slandering
the other side ....
"Our personnel have never
obstructed activities of the joint
observer team and will not do
so in the future. Probably your
personnel were overtaken by
deservers of their own making
while wandering around some
QUALITY
CHARGE IT . . . it's easier to pick, easier to plan, easier
Page 5 A
where. This concerns your, side
only."
Seedlock dismissed tlie Com
munist denial was "routine tac
tics." Fatal Crash
RED BLUFF. Calif. (UP1) -A
headon collision four miles
north of here on U.S. 99 Satur
day killed one man and pinned
a lumber truck driver in his cab
for nearly one hour. '
Highway patrolmen said that
Charles Evan Bray, 31, of Red
ding, Calif., perished when his
car crossed a divider strip and
crashed into tho truck driven
by James Paddleford, 27, of
Sacramento.
SHOP TOYLAND 3RD FLOOR y
DAILY 9:30 to 5:30 l
OPEN EVERY MONDAY & FRIDAY
in,,
mm.
UJLlJJTjfSf
. IyB jit
$
TWIN OR FULL
Weak Resolution Hurts
Disarmament Chances
UNITED NATIONS (UPI -Grudging
Russian acceptance
of a watered-down resolution on
disarmament clouds prospects
for progress at the Geneva
talks, observers said today.
The resolution, sponsored by
46 small nations, was approved
unanimously by tlie General As
sembly's political committee
Friday after it had been
amended to meet Russia's de
mands. Committee approval cleared
the way for resumption of the
17-nalion disarmament confer
ence in Geneva, probably late
next month or early in Janu
ary. Approval of the resolution
by the full assembly is a for
mality. At Russian insistence, the res
olution had been revised to
eliminate all specific proposals
as to areas in which early prog
ress might be expected. Soviet
Ambassador Nikolai T. Fedo-
PLAN HOLIDAY
FOR THE
WILLARD
HOTEL!
Special facilities for any sire
group. Call now for reserva
tions. TU 4-4161.
AND REMEMBER THESE
PAUL BUNYAN
Optn to serve you 7:00
o.m. to 2:00 p.m. Serv.
Ing h tarty breokfaits and
delightful lunches. Clottd
Saturdays,
WILLARD HOTEL - 205 Main
l(l(o
QUILTED
TO-THE-FLOOR
glamorous prints
and fashion solids!
Gleaming acetate taffeta, solids and Chrome
spun stripes quilted to soft cotton with acetate
between. Beautiful multi-color stripes, elegant
contemporary colors. Jumbo corded edge. A
real decorator highlight at this low Penney
price.
renko denounced it as "inade-;
quale." '.
The Russian;, Hacked down",
on a demand that the confer
ence shelve basic principles al
ready agreed on by both East
and West.
The United States welcomed
neutralist support in oppos
ing deletion of tlie reference to
the basic principles on the
ground that the omission would
represent a step backward. The
Russians contended that the
1961 agreement on principles
limited the scope of the Geneva '
talks.
The sponsors, with concur-'
rence of the United States,',
agreed to delete a notation that
shifts in position by both side
had brought a narrowing of dif
ferences on disarmament Rus
sia held that only the Commu
nists had made concessions.
U.S. officials reasoned that his
tory could speak for itself.
PARTIES NOW
OTHER FINE ROOMS
PONDEROSA
Opn from 12.00 noon
serving, buffet lunches,
sissling steak dinners,
tempting refreshments.
Donco to the music of
Wilbur ond Sotch.
TILL 9 P.M.
SPREADS!
to pay!
i t
r
i-
t
I
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