HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1958
Boy Scouts
Hold Event
YREKA A potluck dinner pie-
ceded the Court of Honor for Vreka
Boy Scouts Troop No. 57, recently
held at the Yreka Jackson Street
Elementary School. Host for the
atfair was the sponsor of the
troop, the Lutheran Couples Club
of t lie Kit. Zion Lutheran Church
of Yreka.
During the ceremonies of the
presentation of awards, the troop
charter was presented to the La
theran Couples Club for another
year. Other awards were made as
follows: Tenderfoot, John Arnburg,
Ronald Broce, Robert Ensele,
Thomas Fox, Edwin Greive, Macel
Jeflers. Robert Lick, Ricky Nor
ton, Billy Noyer, Larry Noyer,
Rodney Stanshaw, James Stein
haus and Rodney Stewart.
Second class, Walter Gamble,
Steven Meek, Darryl Solus and
Donald Stevenson: first class, Bil
ly Day, Donald Insko, and Gar'
land Jeffers.
One year pins, Rolph Hanaugh,
Garland Jeffers and Glen Schmidt
second year pins, Billy Day, Don
ald Henson and Grant Hosford
third year pins, Ralph Starritt and
Stephen Taylor: fifth year pins.
Robert Wilcox and Bill Wilson:
six year pin, Victor Grazier, and
even year pins to Bill Brazil,
Walter Friday and Chester Wilcox
Grant Hosford received a pin for
one year of perfect attendance,
Stephen Taylor received a three
year P. A. bar.
Merit badges were awarded to
Donald Henson, Grant Hosford,
Harry Simmons and Glen Schmidt;
star scout awards. Grant Hosford
Glen Schmidt, Harry Simmons and
Floyd Taylor.
Officials of Troop 57 include Nor
man Taylor, scoutmaster, and
Harry Meek, assistant scoutmas
ter: Lawrence Hastings, insti
tutional representative; Harold
Peery, committee chairman and
A. D. Lick, Chester Wilson and
John Corcoran, committeemen.
Judge for the Court of Honor
was Glenn Tripp; Lawrence Has
tings, clerk, and Harold Perry,
assistant clerk.
7 V
v
MO
Answer To Recession
Lays Vith US: Consumer
By STERLING F. GREEN
WASHINGTON ( The consum
er is the man who, sooner or later,
will break up this recession. But
right now he is buying with cau
tion, saving more, trying to get
old bills paid before he takes on
new debt.
That's the story told in city after
city to Associated Press reporters
conducting this Mow s Busi
ness? survey across the country
Out in Reno, Nov., where
gambling is flourishing and busi
ness is ahead ot a year ago,
LEWIS AND CLARK A CAPPELLA CHOIR
High School
Play Selected
GILCHRIST The cast for the
play, "All in the Family," has
been selected at Gilchrist High
School. Mary Helen Edgar and
Mike Oxborrow will play the parts
of Martha and Fred Miller, and
Leeann Curtis and Donovan Hitt
will enact the parts of the daugh
ter, Doris Miller, and the son,
George Miller, respectively. Hen
ry Graybill will be characterized
by Doug Stumbaugh, and Kay Rol
ison and Sje Craig will portray
the parts u reporter ana pnolog
raphen, respectively.
Doris Miller's boy friend will be
depicted by Jim Sample. Sharon
Hitt, Linda Stumbaugh, Mary Sue
Koski and Charles Russell will
play the roles of friends of George
Miller, with Elizabeth Howey as
Miss Muller, a school teacher.
The play is under the direction
of Anna B. Dolezal and will be
presented this spring. A definite
date has not been set.
College Choir
To Visit KF
The 60 voice a cappclla choir
of Lewis and Clark College of
Portland will come to Klamath
Falls on March 8 to sing in the
First Presbyterian Church at
p.m. The concert is being joint
ly sponsored by the Community
Church of Tulclake, the First Pres
byterian Church, and the Peace
Memorial Presbyterian Church of
Klamath Falls. Residents of this
area will be privileged to hear
one of the outstanding choirs of
the West. The choir is on its 10th
annual tour. .
The director of the choir is L.
Stanley Glarum, member of the
music faculty of Lewis and Clark,
whose compositions and arrange
ments are played and sung in
many churches of the United
States. His ability to weld 60 mixed
voices into a homogenous group
is revealed in the appraisal' of
critics who are pleased by the
tonal quality of the organization.
With "Music in the Finest Chor
al Tradition" as its motto, the
choir interprets the music of out
standing composers of choral works
wjth fine shadings of balanced tone
and rhythm.
CHICKEN CAFETERIA
DEWEY, 111. tfl Lowell Heap,
young poultry producer, feeds his
chickens cafeteria style. Heap
saved a heap of time and labor
as he rigged thermostats, time-
switches and meters to feed and
water his. 10,000 pullets. , A family
of electrical and mechanical
"hands" works the feed and wa
ter from a storage supply through
hundreds of feet of troughs.
P.T.A.
FAIRVIEW
By Mrs. James Swansen
Fairview PTA observed Found
ers Day at the meeting held at
the school February 27. Mrs. A.
Breitenstein, Founders Day pro
gram chairman, presented a group
of women in a skit to show the
progress of PTA from its found
ing in 1897 to the present time.
Past PTA presidents of Fairview
were introduced and presented
with attractive jars of candy. Mrs.
Florence Ollmann, . principal,
passed her candy on to a Fairview
teacher, Mrs. Lillian Brandt, who
had also been a PTA president.
Mrs. John Putnam, president of
Klamath County Council, was in
troduced as a guest and announced
the polio vaccine clinic is being
organized for adults of Klamath
County.
Mrs. O. E. Powell presented an
award certificate from the Girl
Scouts. Mr. Hal Geiger, institution
al representative for the Boy
Scouts, presented awards to the
PTA.
The business meeting was con
ducted by the president, Mrs. 0. F.
Badley. .Mrs. R. Mezger resigned
as junior Red Cross representative.
Mrs. Badley asked for a volunteer
to take over as representative.
Mrs. Gladys Langslet, third
grade teacher, won the prize.
Mr. Redkey's fifth grade won the
room count.
The silver tea was served in the
cafeteria by fourth grade mothers
with Mrs. Norman Linville and
Mrs. Reuben Laurhammer in
charge. '
The next meeting jwill be held
March 27 at 2:15 p.m. In the Fair
view School gym.
Meetings Set
By Foresters
LAKEVIEW-Permittees of the
Fremont National Forest and oth
cr stockmen in the county are
invited to attend a series of meet
ings scheduled in Lake County dur
ing March for a discussion and un
derstanding of common problems
with the Fremont staff.
The first meeting scheduled
that of the Southern Fremont Cat
tle and Horsemen's Association in
the office of Supervisor Clayton
Weaver in the post office build
ing, Lakeview, on March 10, 2 p.m.
This group is confined to permittees
in the Warner, Drews Valley and
Thomas Creek ranger districts.
On March 12, at the Silver Lake
ranger station, the afternoon meet
ing will be for all stockmen in the
Silver Lake and adjacent area.
At 2 o'clock the afternoon of
March 14 the advisory board mem
bers of the Fremont Sheepmen's
Association will meet in the super
visor's office in Lakeview.
men found, it was factory workers
who were bearing the brunt of the
recession.
Major credit organizations re
port that defaults and reposses
sions are' up a trifle but the losses
still are low certainly not alarm
mg, nothing to suggest that the
consumer is overloaded with debt.
This is a sampling of the reports
given AP interviewers:
From North Carolina, furni
ture man "I haven't sold a piece
of furniture in a week, but my
trucks are all busv ffnintf out to
puzzled banker said: "People are .haul in stuff people aren't keep-
nervous Without knowing What ine im navmpnts on"
they're nervous about." a Montana banker "Reposses-
Retailers reported buyers are (Si0ns are uo 40 Der cent over last
well heeled but bargain conscious, vear. On tho other hand there has
They seem less willing to pledge been an increase in the number of
a piece of future income lor a savings accounts."
new car or refrigerator, either be
cause they're less sure the income
will hold up or because they think
prices may drop a bit if they wait
-a vain hope, so far.
The average consumer is drink
ing a bit less liquor, buying more
hamburger and less steak, giving
smaller tips.
Except in the harder-hit areas.
he has been making his regular
church contributions and planning
his summer vacation at the same
resort. In more rarefied income
brackets, he is keeping up his
country club membership.
A Nashville furrier reported:
"My most popular mink lines this
year are in the $750 range. Last
year the most popular sellers
were around $1,000." But he can
still sell mink coats.
The survey suggested that the
salaried, white collar employe
hasn't felt much pinch. Even so,
more wives are looking for part
time jobs, all across the country.
And more people are letting their
part-time maids go. More children
are carrying lunches, instead of
buying hot lunches at the school
cafeteria.
Across the country, AP news-
FAITHFUL MEMBER
KITCHENER, Ont. W-W. H. E.
Schmalz was honored by the Kitch
ener-Waterloo Kiwams Club on
completion of 30 years' member
ship without missing a single week
ly meeting. His wife was prejent
ed with a silver platter at the
same lime.
A big San Francisco department
store "Collections are good. It
could be that people want to put
their houses in order and get rid
of debt before they feel any real
recession effects.
A United Auto Workers' official,
Local 887, Los Angeles "I tell
our laid-off aircraft people: Con
serve your money and don't get
into debt until the-job situation
improves."
A welfare official in the South
"It seems to me the average out-of-work
fellow is better off now
than he was in 1954. Then, so
many owed payments, and they
were terrified they'd lose every
thing in the house. More seems
to be paid for now."
The survey indicated that in
spite of Washington's well-publi
cized swing to easier money, cred
it is tighter for millions of lower
income consumers.
But the high-quality borrower or
installment buyer is being wooed
by stores and banks as he has
not been since the credit binge
ol 1955. , A Charlotte, N.C., con
tractor remarked: "Last year you
couldn t get a loan unless you
were a prime customer. Now
they're out asking you wouldn't
you like some money."
In almost every city, depart
ment stores have begun wooing
new credit customers with "re
volving" charge accounts, which
permit a customer to pay, say,
$50 a : month on his account but
keep adding to it. Interest is
charged on the unpaid balance,
In only one city did the AP re
porters find a businessman who
thought tins was being overdone.
A Huntington, W.Va., banker was
"appalled" by the increase. He
said: "Instead of cutting down
they're going deeper into debt.":
A curious by-product of reces
sion is an upturn, in some areas.
In the luxury trade. Macy's vast
department store in New York
City reported it is selling more
jewels, furs, and perfumes, and
costlier ones..
A spokesman for the National
Dress Manufacturers Assn. of
fered a possible explanation for
the same trend in women's wear!
"It appears that with the falling
off of family spending for durable
goods such as autos, they have
more to spend on embellish
ments."
Men's clothing sales have
lagged this winter while women's
apparel flourished. "When the
family starts curtailing the cloth
ing budget, men are the first to
go," explained Milton Fried, re
search director of the Amalga
mated Clothing Workers Union.
"People are eating bigger
lunches and cutting down on din
ner," said an official of the New
York State Restaurant Assn.
Do-it-yourself haircuts are com
ing back in Minneapolis.
Movie attendance is so-so. A
Virginia report says, "Movies are
holding the level of last year,
which was bad."
FILM
Developing
8-Picture Rolls
Developed & Printed
ONLY
32
Reprints - 4c each
WESTERN
THRIFT DRUGS
635 Main -TU 4-3S43
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FRIDAY - 4 P.M.
. V ": '
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VALLEY PUMP
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ALL MAKES REPAIRED
Call TU 4-9776
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n
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P
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Earrings, necklaces and bracelets in waterfall wafers
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