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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1959)
SUNDAY, JUNE 21. 1959 HKRALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS OREGON PACE S A INSPECTING A NEW SPOON for addition to her collection ii Mrs. Isabel Schrader of Mount Shasta. She it studying the intcription on the ipoon, and a few large ipoent in har collection ara arrayad on tha table. . Photo by McKinney 11 1 T j& - a JUST A FEW of tha many hundred souvenir spoons in tha collection of Mrs. Isabel Schrader of Mount Shasta are dis played here. Emblems on the handles of the spoons all have special meaning. Her collection includes spoons from all parts of tha world. Photo by McKinney Mount Shasta Yoman Collects Spoons As Hobby Over The Garden Gate YREKA GARDEN CUB MONTAGUE Several demon strations, featuring a variety of table settings (or different occa- sions. highlighted the recent meet ing of the Yreka Garden Club held at the Willow Creek ranch home, Organization In Gotham Otters To Sit With Cats By IOC Ql'IGG j The hired sitter will charge us NEW YORK i CPU Modern ay $1W a dav phis carfare. I living is in a new breakthrough. furnuhed from a pool of ano Now we got sitters for cat.!70 persons in the greater Nc That'a right, cat utters to answer, York area who have volunleere the meows of felines forsaken by t0 lhe le;.ue (or 5uc.h dulv. vacationing owners. The rnove-j reriprocal sitter is aimpl ment is in full purr in New York , caj o( ,cralch (or your this summer. .'and you scratch for mine. Th Mrs. Judith s. Schofield, who in-:. " , . , , , , vented the institution of cat sit-! ,. rin ,,, ,,, ting, admits she got the idea from;. h. .... ,All. r,r. u.hl!. baby sitting. As far as is known. nn lr. vnu r.llrn this is the only organized cat sit- ;. ,,:., ting effort in the world. It is one; " of the many activities of the Save! " Ju ant de,ar A Cat League. Inc., of which Mrs. e ld' r'", Schofield is president. ' Peule tth rt the ,lthn' The idea is that if you're going, Mr- Schofield sa.d. on vacation you leave the kitty ai The Save A Cat League, a non home, in house or apartment, and 'profit outfit incorporated in New the sitter comes in usually! York, was founid 'car an(1 twice, a day and feeds it. I half ago by Mrs. Scholield and changes its pan, and plays with it,! live other ladies who decided to a little. The service comes in two'liy to get other people worked up handy sizes you can hire a sit- about the plisht of homeless, ler: or you can engage in recipro- starving cats. She says there are cal cat sitting. lon.000 stray cats in New York ' The league's main activity U and 40 s. , ding homes for the strays, ll "We're interested," she said, "in aces 500 to 1,0110 cats a year. hearing from people throughout le says. The league now has'the country who might be interest- Its list ol ed in starting local chapters." TAX MAN LIKES ORCHIDS SA.V DIEGO. Calif. uJi-Richard Vaughn, state inheritance tax ap praiser, has a fresh baby orchid ned men and women in their 30 s in his lapel each day, no mat ter where he travels. He raises them for a hobby, and carries potted orchid on trips. bout 300 members. jonsors includes such prominent imes as Basil Rnthbone. tpsy !ose lee. June Havoc, Genevieve. Mrs. Schofield is, of course, a cat lover, and her current cat, a critter named "Hagpole." has layne Meadows. Hermione Gin gamed some fame as an actor. He :old, and Orson Bean. ,cled ln cjsnt porlormances .of There is no such thing as an i "The Barber of Seville" at the .inplaci'.ihle cat." Mrs. ScholieldlMetropolitan Opera House. Got raid. "We advertise that we have 'paid $10 a night and cabfare. cats. Once we placed one that I u' i w. unniiv .in,.. had only three legs. I had a girl come in asking for a six-weck-old kitten, and she took an old beat-up tomcat with a cauliflower ear be cause he jumped in her arms and made love to her. This kind of thing happens all the time. We've placed several with tails cut off." Far from being an outfit of lit tle old Indies with shawls, the league is composed mostly of mar- then." she said. "Throws his weight around with all the other cats." Chas. J. Ciiek TAILOR Suits A Slocks Medt to Order Ptrftcr Fit Guoronrotd 119 SOUTH 7th Value Rate the ROCKET while we evaluate your car! By Any Measure OLDS Is the value car of the Medium Price class! COME IN! DICK B. MILLER CO. 7th OLDS-CADILLAC t Klometh Ph. 4-4154 Huge Crowd At Dinner In Honor Of Jewish Cleric LAWRENCE. Mass. API A; A- message from Gov. Foster capacity crowd of 600 men and Furcolo of Massachusetts typified Protestants. Roman! the soirit behind the affair. He few miles north of Montague. jcatholirs and Jews attended a said: "The occasion serves as a model for similar groups through out the country ... It is my privilege to register the apprecia tion of the commonwealth for this local display of the good neighbor policy and interracial amity in Massachusetts." Rabbi Twersky told the gather ing: "I feel actually that this tes timonial was not held for me but instead for my spiritual children." of Mrs. B. H. Hager, who was as.;testimonjal djnner Thursday night .-..o. ,o u,,.o j 0r a Kanm. ine sponsor was a Homer Atchley of Yreka. (catholic priest. Garden club members gathered Honored was Rabbi Norman at the Yreka Inn, from which point Towersky. head of the Orthodox they drove out to Mrs. Hager's Jewish Congregation of Lawrence, home, where, alter touring the The Very Rev. Edward J. Carney, garden and her home, the group O S. A., his close friend, was the enjoyed their sack lunches, with Mrs. Hager and Mrs. Atchley serv ing coffee and ice cream cones. sponsor. Father Carney is a past national chaplain of the American Legion me oriel uusiness session wasiand pastor ot m. mary s lainouc He expressed appreciation to Fa ther Carney and described him as a very dear friend. , The priest said: "I am proud to say that he has been, he is, and always will be my dear and close friend. A tribute to him is a trib ute to his flock and his people." Rahbi Samuel Foxx of Boston, president of the Orthodox Rab- states are carved into small sub divisions. , And she says she would veto such a change. -I T By J. O. McKINNEY- MOUNT SHASTA Mrs. Isabel Schrader, prominent Mount Shas ta clubwoman, finds spoon collect ing an absorbing hobby. She re cently secured a spoon which com memorates the 49th stale. Her or der for number 50 has been filed. All the other states have been received before. - ( This collection, begun eight years ago, covers the field.-' All countries are represented, and many of the Indian tribes of North America. The Great Horn Spoon is represented by two num bers. One carved from the horn of a caribou; the other from a ST J0HVS- Nnd. fAP)-Queen buffalo horn as a utility article E!izabe.th II set off on a tour of by hunters o7 the plains. I Newfoundland Friday after a cor- Various centennials, represented 'dial but restrained welcome at St. by spoons, have been recalled by I. Johns, capital of the rocky, storm Jnoking through the Schrader col-pattered island. She is opening a lection. Even foreign countries! six-week journey across Canada, with national celebrations have confronting one of the most gruel mementoes m her vast group. ing programs in her hard-working The "collector states that she has.'K" To her conducted by Mrs. Ray Kelly, re- Church in Lawrence. tiring president. Installation of new officers was postponed to a later date, because of the absence of the incoming president, Mrs. Edson Foulke Jr., Gazelle, and treasurer, Mrs. L. E. Georges. V reka. Plans for a brunch were dis cussed and is to he held at the! PORTLAND f APl-Secrelary of hinit-,i rnn-ii , r.rl;1,.r Rn.,n home of Mrs. A. K. Crebbin of , State Howell Appling Jr. said Fri- .aid. .., in nistorv when daily. When this occurs she feels Yrekl1 July '?' A volunteer com- day that political demagoguery islpeopi,, of th( world have faied that oni oornpp nf her rnllwtion v" 1 v ccut , " ' '""(SO aismany ai. ueneva, we nave indl one Corner 01 ner C01ieCllOnlf.j -tlm , m kaluAn lahir nA manasnmont . . ... , lumitru wiLii mi. i. n. uiiftuiMin i -. n 1 aemonsiraien 10 inosp experiencea : Demagogues Hit By Aide will be complete. She sees no like- of Yreka as chairman. Others of lihood of more states being admit, the committee includes Mrs. ted unless some of the existing' P"la Cairns, Mrs. Mary Silva, Queen Begins Canada Tour Mrs. Charlotte Glover. Mrs. Harold Thomas, Mrs. I. W. Sawyer and Jessie Coonrod. Following the closing of the busi ness session, Mrs. Hager took charge of the meeting for the pre sentation of her program on table setting. For her first demonstration she set up a picnic table in the patio, featured brass-studded blue jean cloth place mats, with red ban dana napkins, the silverware tucked in pockets. Another interesting setting was a kitchen buffet. Using a gold col ored cloth, Mrs. Hager featured all copper utensils and appointments, including a copper chafing dish. For a centerpiece, she used a cop per sprinkling can with an ar rangement of Shasta daisies. between labor and management. Appling, in an address prepared for the slate Lions Club Conven tion, said that while there is in creasing harmony in religious, economic and race relations, the opposite is the case in labor-management relations. "This controversy," he said, "is in large part manufactured by po- tical demagoguery. It has been encouraged by those who have ex ploited the vote getting propensi ties of pitting group against group. "We should no longer permit po litical hacks to attempt to cam ouflage the fact that in the final analysis, the interests of labor and management are one and the same. "Under our economic system, all of the segments of our economy are inter-dependent, and the soon er we start acting like it. the bet ter off the country will be. "Any economic group which leaders in the world that we have reached the summit, the summit; of brotherhood and the summit of understanding." Telegraphic tributes were re ceived from Vice President Rich ard M. Nixon, House Majority Leader John W. McCormack D Mass)' and House Minority Leader Charles Halleck R-Ind. no particular tavorues. 10 ner ror a lew nours 11 appeared ner they all represent some event, or f eather luck had deserted her and an interesting ' setting in the epoch of importance. But some; that grim gray fog which smoth- j Fourth of July motif, using deep Oriental numbers are brought out cred St. Johns for three days red plates and mugs on an ivory before the rest. One represents a might disrupt the tour. The thick 'cloth, and completing the patriotic dragon, another is shaped like a mist lifted miraculously a few ! theme with an arrangement of red a quick change on the patio table, ! political purposes is not serving us own Dest interests, and it cer tainly is not serving the best in. sweet Williams, white carnations, and blue-dyed Shasta daisies. Mrs. Marion Perry of Little scorpion, while a lizara appears, inv u, jci to be crawling across the display airplane from London Thursday i.hu with the third ' afternoon. The skies were virtual- Symbols of what is represented "T'm . I . .!SShasla' con,r,bu,ed 10 the dem" re often built into the tip of theinode1 ,he "'k. heavily wooded ration of table setting for Sun handle, . Metals of all descriptions re8'on around the Then ly brunch, by using a red cloth. eS rt re,Urned ,h1 ""'"Piece of red and white shaoe, siz and per ods !Queen a',ern00n PP""""" rose, arranged in t low level bowl. Name r or a national j bu' T" niht ! . and bras, colfee maker. ,.i.hrtinn m anv country, and a Friday i program began with a and her settings of the Bob White that ,.,ll these nlaces and eption at government House, a .pattern, r mnlnr tftitr Af narl. nf C I.Jinc . .a . thing, will be forthcoming. not visited Thursday, and a stop How many In the collection? a, Newfoundland1 new eight-mil Mrs. Schrader. herself, doesn t,jon.doar government building, know Neither docs she intend to count them. She says she neve I . phj saw an unusual specimen w thout G m o( trying to get it or a ''"capital. to open the new 34-mil-of it for her extensive collect, on. gj t trminal bu,d. She finds that spoons require little .. g( that ,or care, fill a minimum of "P"-' transatlantic airliners, and the upkeep is nil. What hobby i could be less difficult? Delving mto heirlooms member of Southern Siskiyou Heir looms group gave her the idea of snoon collecting. She found many noons were keepsakes. Each seemed to tell a story all its own, tt.A uiai nraMir-allv lim- r. " , :::.. :,;.- .;: seattlk (ap - a Seattle :iWoman Taken By Con Men For showing a dessert bridge luncheon setting, Mrs. Roy Town Icy, Little Shasta, used beautiful crystal, Cambridge blue Fostoria on a white cloth. Her low floral centerpiece consisted of blue bells, white delphiniums and blue pan sies. Mrs. Hager, at the same time, was illustrating the use of a green cloth, featuring crystal and silver place settings, and tall green can dles in crystal holders, as her fa vorite formal style for dinner. Mrs. Hager's final demonstra tion, both delighted and surptised her guests. Featuring a Hawaiian motif, she created a luau setting on her large round coffee table. Using large round water lily leaves and ti leaves as a covering, Mrs. Hager arranged a variety of fruits and fowers with a dried banana frond as a bowl. It was filled with bananas and pineapples. A milk glass punch bowl was placed in the center to complete the table .esa. w.inom ... . ""V woman told police Thursday the ed mto the '" J paid two men $1,500 to have ant, finds it so fascinating that she has, . ... ..... . no desire to ever drop it. Few are ' " more versed in this branch than I Marguerite H Reiten 4S. ehe. Few have gone so far into," m" lalked her into hav- mo S.-JH1 lavnrth nf ravnejira. An the subject. ,,.. Ichimney. roof and gutters. Then!d,reor- ,rom T,lch Mrved When friends of this lady find a . . . .. . . . Hawaiian punch to her guests. spoon of unusual design, their lirst i hich nccde(, removing reaction Is: "Does Isabel nave . C. i.." n .h. h.'i th. Sb rl. nl the men went one like 17 If she ha n t. the work oversight is soon eorrectfd. But,. . .. the anU de. the chances now are h. she cmi K m and , duplicate ny spoon that seen (or $, jn csh whjch Mrj anywhere. And that she can tel.pejten , from bank Whef) i interests story connected with BM for , recejp( mt , the design, or history of how it mm Uli u they dro came about. ' ..ymj,ve gM ,ht rwj(j, ,n There are a few other spoon worW the work we oi( collections in existence: Mr' your house." nraoer a lan man irom inese other spoon devoteei is extensive, fne hu written many interesting articles about spoons that have keen published In many hobby, end trade magazines In this, and ether countries. ' The 50th atate spoon it expected FISHY INSURANCE PLOT JANESVfLLE, Wis. (UPD The odore Hawke, police charged, scattered his fishing gear aoout the Rock River in an attempt to make it appear he had drowned so he could collect on his own life insurance. He was convicted nd placed on one year's probation Thursday for leaving fishing lines untended. GRANGE NEWS A concert was staged recently for the Lookout Grange, by the members tof the Sweet Adelines Chorus, the Society for the Pres ervation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America and the string quartet from Klamath Union High School. The Sweet Adelines were Marg Ruger, Alice Michels. Kay Sim mons, Pat Blakesley, Bea Amour- eux, Ruth Krider, Georgiana Knudson, Vivian Fisher. Betty Perkins, Very Durant, Betty Bell, Ruth Trelease and Jeanette Mar shall. SPEBSQSA singers were Homer Amoureux, Everett Ball, W. L. Bullard. Henry Colfelt, Jess Crab tree, Reno DcBortoli, Vernon KLAMATH TOIISTT rinranl Rill Pv.ni Run Fuller Roland w. wickiun'd. ii .mi jvr 'Earl Hamakor, Les Hobeck, Dr. Ann ; Miiir. is I Frank Johnson, Robert Johnson, Allen Bvrum Myrra. an. Malm, andi, . r. , Hn.n Bna siaiay. is. nxidins Charles Mortensen, Jim Perkins, PhllliD Ardtn Nll-hftl. 34 inri m-m..- n. 1 .. D..AA berla M. Wade. u. M.dlord . ' John r. crbari. 14. oMiou.i. ini-lailani, Konert smitn. Hub stone, Mrs. Hager then achieved, with permits itself to be exploited for terest, of our society as a whole.' On The Record lalana. and Carrel Znn Johnaon. la Jair.tr S Lendl. 30. and Joyca Ann Sauyer. 20. MacdneL Edward Atkin, 30, and Marjorle Prealar, 19 IIIVORCE PETITIONS PaUy Menzer va. Ml I ion H. Man ser, aeeka divorce. Wllham Crosby Corbel! va. Kath ryn Mabel Corbelt. aeekl divorce. Wanda Myrtle Paup va. Maurice D. Paup. aeeka dlvnrre. Roaa Lea Skylea va. Donald Jamea Skyle.. aeeka divorce. Shirley Ann Slate va. Sammy Wayne Slate, aeeka dlvorre. Viola Lanoro Branhem va. Jamea Warren Brenham, aeekt divorce. Vera I. Gordon v.. Melvui George Gordon, aeeka divorce. Marvin Thomas, Pat Wilson, Dr. Gerald Nicholson and Lyle Smith. The itring quartet consisted of Julia Lawrence, first violin; Car rol Ross, second violin: Caroline Bullard, viola and Jerry Ruth Wickersham, cello. Following the concert, dinner was served by the grange. BUDGET RESCUED NEW YORK (UPI)-Gov. Nel son A. Rockefeller announced Thursday night that he had ef fected another 4300-a-year saving in the date budget, by elimmatnig state payments for calling cards for deputy superintendents of the state Department of Insurance. RESUMES INNOCUOUSLY LONDON (UPP - Daily Mir ror columnist William Connor, convicted last week of libeling American piano player Liberace, opened his first "Cassandra" col umn following the court - action this way: "Let us now proceed. And the subject is the innocuous one of cricket." "I Htecf te moke e fortune by reee'rinf Vacuum Cleenrs I Hiit ketite, kut, since they Jet wise te DEAN'S One Year uarantMal Service I'm t'"f fcreke!" DEAN'S STARK'S 122 S. till TU4-719J OSBORN HOTEL EUGENE, ORE. ttre. J. a. larlr Jee tarlf Je. Prevrleteea Tbereoglily Modem JUNIOR RODIO QUEEN'S CONTEST SUNDAY JUNE 21 TULILAKI AIR6ltOUNDS DOUGLAS-FIR PLYWOOD Low Prices On Other Grades SPECIAL PRICE , 25 Sheett or mare $3.40 ea. 200 SHEETS LEFT CASH & CARRY David A. Richardson Co. Sprlrx) Lake Re4 LOW COST Money Savers Boyd's COFFEE - 5'54 $1 09 Allswecf i'.n Tuxedo Margarine Royal Crown and Nehi Canned Pop Tuxedo TUNA Mission Whole Green Beans Vi Tins Sri (6 7i Kurley Kote Pot Cleaners Reg. 29c 19e 3 in a Pkg. Kool-Aid 6 -29 FIZZIES Instant Sparkling Drink Pkg. of 8 25c Giant Size TIDE Pard DOG FOOD 9 Swift's Premium Skinless Pkg. of 10 Wieners Boneless, We Cube Free Round Steaks 100 Pure Gr. Beef Good Barbecued or Braised Short Ribs Try at a steak torn Sunkist Large Fancy Lemons Crisp and Crunchy Carrots 2:25 Specials For Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday . RIGHT RESERVED TO LIMIT! Town Country Shopping Center - 3800 So. Sixth neyearaiBjB lS1 I 0 i al,a,t ,l