Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 27, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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GETTING READY FOR THE FEASTING This flock of fine brome turkeys was raised
by Mrs. Dale Newnham in the Pine Grove District this year. There are 52 toms and hens
grown to maturity from a start of 75 poults. Turkeys are susceptible to many ills.
Weather changes affect them when they are young and sometimes they just droop
and die. They take constant supervision during the growing staces but are mighty
HKKAI.n AM) MOWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon Wednesday. November 27, 13 PACE 3 J
r : ill' X A:0. J !
SOME FOLKS DlhiE OUT Turkey is frequently served today on the menus in res
taurants, and is not reserved for holidays as it once was not too many years ago. Prep
aration of the bird and stuffing recipes differ with cooks. Some prefer a dry dress
ing with only onion and sage seasoning. Other cooks prepare a moist stuffing with
celery, onion, green peppers and seasoning . . . cornbread is a favorite with Southern
cooks, sometimes chestnuts, oysters or other extras are added. Regardless, those who
have the festive meal away from home, get generous portions of dressing with their
light and dark meat. At the Winema Hotel, Chef Bob Kempton was preparing tur
key for the oven. He braises vegetables, onions and celtry and a bit of pork sausage
with seasoning before mixing with moistened bread slices. He does not stuff bird
but places still other coarsely chopped celery, onions and parsley around the fowl in
an open pan for flavor. Dressing or stuffing is baked separately. Turkey is roasted
uncovered lat 350 degrees for four hours for a 16-pound birdl. It is basted fre
quently with butter during cooking period.
Johnson Asks Churches
WASHINGTON H'PI '-President
Johnson urged Tuesday
that the Thanksgiving procla
mation issued hy the late John
K. Kennedy be read in churches
throughout the nation this
Thursday as a memorial to
him.
The President's statement
said:
"One of the last messages of
President .lolm Fitzgerald Ken
nedy to his fellow countrymen
was the Thanksgiving IJ a v
proclamation which he issued
on November 4. l!tfi-L I urge
that his proclamation he read
in the churches of the I'nitld
States in their services on No
vember 28 as a memorial to
him. I also ask that the news
papers, and the television and
radio stations make it available
lo all of the American people
hy including it in their recocni
tion of this first and most sol
emn of our hol days. We dedi
cate Thanksgiving Day. as we
have for over 300 years, as a
day lo give thanks lo God for
His gills and the sustenance
which He has provided in un
dertaking the tasks of our na
tion." The proclamation:
Thf While House
Thanksgiving Day.
By the President nf Ihr I nil
ed States of America
A pryx-lamatinn:
Over three centuries ago, our
111
forefathers in Virginia and in
Massachusetts, far Jrom home
in a lonely wilderness, set
aside a time of thanksgiving.
On the appointed day. they
gave reverent thanks for their
safely, for the health of their
children, for the fertility of
their fields, for the love which
bound them together and for
the faith which united them
with their God.
So ton when the Colonies
achieved their independence,
our first President in Ihe first
year of his first administration
proclaimed November 2fi. 178!).
as "a day of public thanksgiv
ing and prayer In be observed
by acknowledging wilh grateful
hearts the many signal favors
of Almighty God" and called
upon the people of Ihe new Re
public lo "beseech Him lo par
don our national and other
transgressions ... to promote
the knowledge and practice of
true religion and virtue . . . and
eenerally to grant unto all man
kind such a degree of temporal
prosperity as He alone knows
to he best."
And so too. in Ihe mid-1 of
America's tragic Civil W a r.
Thanksgiving Dinner
ROAST TURKEY
and All the Trimmings
$1.50 Plate
BONANZA CAFE
To Read Proclamation
President Lincoln proclaimed
Ihe last Thursday of November,
1K63. as a day to renew mir
gratitude for America's "fruit
ful fields." for our "national
strength and vigor." and for
all our "singular deliverances
and blessings."
Much time has passed since
the first Colonists came to
rocky shores and dark foresls
of an unknown continent, much
time since President Washing
ton led a young people into the
experience of nationhood, much
time since President Lincoln
saw Ihe American nation
through the ordeal of fraternal
war and in these years our
population, our plenty and our
power have all grown apace.
Today wq, are a nation of near
ly two hundred million souls,
stretching from coast to coast,
on into the Pacific and north
toward the Arctic, a nation en
joying Ihe Iruils of an ever
expanding agriculture and in
dustry and achieving standards
of living unknown in previous
history. We give our humble
thanks for this.
Yet. as our power has grown,
so has our peril. Today we give
Child's Plate 75c
good to eat when they reach maturity. Left, Patricia Lynn, 4 in January, and Susan
Gail, 5, were a bit irked because turkeys, suspicious of Herald and News photograph
er Don Kettler, refused to stop and pick uo oats they scattered to keep birds near
camera. Center, Mrs. Newnham clutches big torn. She does not use axe. It was a
'Zosf Art' Of Turkey Raising Still Carried On Here
ltv KITH KINO
Heaven bless ycur house to
Hay with peace and plenty
too . . . the walls wherein yon
dwell in joy, the roof that shel
ters you. T'.ie windows oioned
wide to love, the hearth where
friendship plows, the door that
welcomes all who come and
cheers each one who ocs: bless
the trees that stand outide . . .
bless every llrwer too, and
bless the things that make jour
house a "Home Sweet Heme to
Vou." Anonymous.
Again, on Thursday, families
w ill gather for th great annual
festival of Thanksgiving.
The old familiar recipes will,
lie recalled hy those who have
cherished them from year to
year . . . the spices will come
dewn from the shelves to spread
their fragrance. Pie crust, rich
and flaky, will be latticed
across mincemeat . . . plum
.puddings, sparked with nuts
and currants will he ready for
the flame . . . the rich mixture
of bread crumbs and sage, of
onions and celery, awaits the
millions of plump flow I that will
grace as many Thanksgiving
platters.
From New England's gently
rolling bills to the high desert
and the long shoreline of the
restless Pacific, great flocks of
turkeys have been groomed for
their destiny.
From plaintive, peeping
poults, beneath a man-made ho
ver or the gentle shelter of a
turkey hen. they have matured
in a few short months to broad
breasted beauties ready for the
oven.
Some years ago the produc
tion of fine turkey terns and
hens was a majcr industry in
Klamath County. They num
bered in the thousands in com
mercial flocks and many a farm
family raised its own birds for
family gatherings. This week a
survey revealed that turkey
raising is a vanishing business
in the Klamath Basin, as out
moded as high-bufton shoes and
our thanks, most of all, lor the
ideals of honor and faith we in
herit from our forefathers for
Ihe decency of purpose, stead
fastness of resolve and strength
of will, for the courage and the
humility, which they possessed
and which we must seek every
day (o emulate. As we express
our gratitude, we must never
forget that the highest appreci
ation is not to utter words but
to live by them.
1-et us therefore proclaim our
gratitude (o Providence f o r
manifold blessings let us be
humbly thankful for inherited
ideals and let us resolve lo
share those blessings and (hose
ideals with our fellow human
beings throughout the world.
Now. therefore, I. John F.
Kennedy. President of Ihe Unit
ed States of America, in con
sonance with Ihe joint resolu
tion of the Congress approved
December 2fi. 11(41. 55 Slat. .2
S U.S. C. K7B', designating Ihe
fourth Thursday of November
in each year as Thanksgiving
Day, do hereby proclaim Thurs
day. November. 28. as a
day of national thanksgiving.
On that day let us gather in
First Church of Christ, Scientist
A Branch of The Mother Church, Thi First Church of Christ,
Scientist in Boiton, Moss. 1 0th and Washington
Services: Sunday Service 11:00 a.m.
Sundoy School 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday Evening Testimony Meeting 8:00 O'Clock
Lctson-Scrmon Subject Thanksgiving, Nov. 28
"THANKSGIVING"
Golden Ttil: Piolmi 65 1, 4. Prom mlelh far (h, O
od, in Sion: . , . w iholl b to(tilid wilh th foodnt ol
thy homo, n ol thy half temple.
Nurury lactlittet available during church service.
the bustle. .No longer do gob
blers spar for flock supremacy
or hens lay clutches of eggs
they think are hidden from Hie
human eye.
T!ie housewife, escaping "fuss
and leathers." buys her bird
fresh from the supermarket,
shipped from some distant field
or pasture, its drumsticks ex-
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READY FOR THE FEAST A beautifully browned Thanksgiving turkey it tfi9 pride
and joy of any cook. Chef Kempton enjoys preparations for a holiday dinner and
works faithfully to follow the usual dinner patterns. He outlined silver tray wilh dec
orative greens and a ring of spiced ruby-red crabapples that nestled close to bird.
He removed wings, legs and thighs first to make breast meat easy to carve. Around
home tables, family members will vie for the "tidbits," the wishbone, the giblets,
"the part that goes over the fence last." There will be the bounty from America's fer
tile land, crisp Jonathan apples and walnuts for the Waldorf salad, small creamed on
ions from rows in the field, Netted Gems I om the Klamath country whipped to fluffy
whiteness . . golden yams from Alabama, cranberry sauce from a Washington bog.
It will be a day to give Thanks.
sanctuaries dedicated lo wor
ship and in homes blessed by
family affection to express our
gratitude for Ihe glorious gills
of God; and let us earnestly
SCHOOL IN PARIS
PARIS UP!i Two child
ren of Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu.
widow of a slain South Vietna
mese leader, arrived in Paris
from Home Tuesday night to
enroll in school.
The children are lx- Tliuy. 18,
and her brother. I Quyhn. 11.
Mme. Nhu's eldest son. Trac,
15. and daughter Le Quyen 4.
remained in Rome.
Plan Your
1
Retirement Income
Throuqfi
Eauitahte'l Livnq Imurinct
John H. Houston
Vrvir. Vnr tt7?
portly tethered to await the
roasting.
:!usy Mrs. Pale 'Madeline'
Newnham, mother of four, who
lives in tlie Pine (Jrovo District,
just off Stale Highway titi. over
a dip in the road and beyond
the juncticn, is an exception.
She successfullv combines
turkey raising on a diversilied
and humbly pray thai He will
continue to guide and sustain
us in Ihe great unfinished tasks
of achieving peace, justice, and
understanding among all men
and nations and of ending mis
ery and suffering wherever
they exist.
In witness whereof. I have
hereunto set my hand and
caused the Seal of (he United
States of America to be af
fixed. Done at the City of Washing
Ion this fourth dav of
v-l
itiiat-n UN
tfjaviriii
FURNACE SALES
I1 Don't Risk Running Out of Fuel! S
; Uic Our "CHECK and FILL" Syttem
Don't Risk Running Out of Fuel!
Use Our "CHECK and FILL" System
WESTERN OIL .
AND BURNER CO. of Klamath Fold
1845 So. 6th Ph. TU 4-3873
"prop." She used modern method of "sticking" which paralyzes and bleeds the bird.
Right, Susan Gail pursues part of flock. Wings of grown birds are exceptionally
strong and they can deal handler a wicked blow. Mrs. Newnham began dressing
operations Monday for Thanksgiving birds.
ranch, with employment in the
shoe department of Miller's De
partment More. II is tile same
ranch where, once upon a lime,
her niolher-in-law, Mrs. Sadie
Newnham, raised "upwards" of
3.(100 poults to marketable birds.
Mrs. Sadie Newnham slill lives
on the ranch, an early - day
homestead.
November in Ihe
Year ol Our Lord
Nineteen Hundred
and Sixly - lluee,
and of the inde
IK'iiflence of the
United Slates of
A m e r i c a Ihe
one hundred and
eighty-eighth.
John F. Kennedy
President:
Rusk
Secretary of Stale.
My I he
Dean
Phone 4-3873
HEATING
OILS
COAL
PRES-TO-LOGS
SERVICE
and
This year. Madeline Newnham
raised 52 fine bronze toms and
hens, that before the end of (he
holiday season will all grace lo
cal tables. She raises birds to
supplement her income, caring
for them personally from brood
ing (o hulchcring.
Her handling of the flocks is
professional. Feathers are loos
ened when the brain is pierced.
She picks them "dry." She pins
and draws And is proud of the
finest product. Most of her birds
go to individual customers. This
year's toms arc averaging 20
pound. Hons tip the scale from
12-14.
Five days a week for seven
years toff and on', she says,
she has served customers iit
Miller's. An older daughter, Kay
Warner, cares for the small
Newnham sisters, Susan Clail.
5 years old on Dec. ID, Patricia
l,ynn. 4 in January, a baby
THANKSGIVING
SERVICES
WILL BE HELD AT
Victory Temple
THURSDAY
1909 Homedole Road
w$m 1
the
f Thanksgiving Tradition ,
Ji, Flowers have symbolized oil the
W hountics we are thankful for . . . f
vy rom he ,inie ,he Plorims ,n Ji
j J r ' 96" The modern hostess will
i jfi AN. use "owcrs abundantly ... to fpjr
A (Vll beautify her table ond enhance Izj
Corsages i 1-00
Table Arrangements R"d' " Go ... 2.50
J Potted Plants Compl, Sol,t,'0,, 3.00
Unarranqed Bouquet
of fresh cut
Pompons & Greens
$ 1 75 Cash
I & Carry
Open Thanksgiving Eve until 7:00
Closed All Day Thanksgiving Day
Nyback's Flower Fair
3614 So. 6th St. TU 4 8188
( 1
iWtfipfr St.
brother. Dale James, 1 jear.old
on Nov. 18 and her own two
children.
iMrs. Newnham who also gar
dens for the family table has lit
tle time for "joining." She
says, "I am just too busy."
This week she has been bu.-y
from damn lo dark. If you are
lucky enough to have one of her
birds in your kitchen on Thanks
giving morn, you'll know it is
as perfect as care can make it.
Have a Happy Thanksgiving.
Worry of
FALSE TEETH
Slipping or Irritating?
Don't be embarrassed by loose false
teeth Hpplnu. dropping or wobblinn
when you em. tulle or laugh. Ju&t
sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your
plates. This pleasant powder gives a
remarkable sense or added comfort
and security by holdlns plates more
flrmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty tasta
or reeling. It's alkaline (nonracidi.
Get FASTEETH at any drug counter.
10.00 to 11:00
Pastor Silas Jones
SPECIAL
TU 4-8173
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