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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1961)
t P.OJWM0 0l&eW AeVePNflSB. 8Blb F1U, Ore. Camp fire leaders See Scrdllfifrff, Hew Panoramic Visual Aid Concept By HELEN L. MERSHON A new concept in visual aids which aims at emotions and atti tudes rather than teaching facts will be shown in Klamath Falls for the first time Monday. '-The new medium. "Scrollfilm," is a slowly projected 35mm film which moves horizontally in a con tinuous panoramic scene, rather than the conventional vertical pat tern of individual pictures. Klamath Council. Camp Fire Girls leaders will preview the film at their fall training ses sion, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 30 at the YMCA. Councils from through out Southern Oregon will be in at tendance. Janet Murray, Spokane, region al director of Camp Fire Girls, Inc., will demonstrate the new technique which is the culmination of more than two years of re search by Camp Fire leaders, an' thropologists and human relations experts. A continuous panel ot tempera end water color impressionistic scenes, some with printed cap tions, was drawn by New York artist Barbara Carr Wagner, after Irvine Mitigate designed the in expensive medium at the request of national Camp Fire officials. Margaret Mead, renowned an thropologist, author and traveler, wrote the script. Coordinators were Dr. Ronald and Peggy Up- pit, human relations team from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. To date, a series of four films has been approved, according to Miss Murray. Three will be avail' able in the Klamath Falls area Procedure Changes May Save Sfate Welfare Cash SALEM (AP) Oregon's State Public Welfare Commission looked sharply Friday at its budg' et and adoption policy and made; procedure changes it hopes will save state and county welfare lunas. The changes still would leave the commission headed for a $464,743 state fund deficit, but this does not mean the commis sion actually will end the bien nium in the red. What the commission did was shift, welfare recipients into areas so it could get the maximum amount of federal participation in the program. SUNDAY I CATHOLIC DAUGHTERS, No. : 1295, 0:30 a.m.. Winema, Hotel. Initiation breakfast, immediately : after 8 a.m. Mass. JACK POT BARREL RACING, 2 p.m., Fairgrounds. Final day. Entries close at 2 p.m. MONDAY KLAMATH COUNTY Pomona Fifth Degree, 8 p.m.. Midland Grange HalL Subordinate grang. ' ers bring candidates. Women bring . sandwiches or dessert. Obituaries OHO ' LEOLA 0D, , died In thli city act. 21. survived by tne miiBtna. am : melt, ol this ellvi father. Htnrv Lewlsi ' stitsr, ftosle Lm Johnson, bottt el Sin ' Bernerdlno. Cellf. O'Helr'e Memorial Chapel will announce funeral arrange. H1LMICK LAURA ANN HELMICK. a, died In Ihl CHy Oct. V. Survived bV The hus band Robert. Klamath Pells; sister, Bonn Schwerti, North Hollywood, Calif. I broth er, Arthur Smedlev. North Hollywood. Albert Smedlay. George Smedley, Leslie Smedley. all In England. O'Halr's Me morial Chapel will announce funeral ar rangements. huTlir CHARLES EUOSNE HUBLER. 71, res Idem of Corvallls. Ore., died here Oct. V, teal. Survivors Include brothers, John L. and 'rod H. Hubler, this citvi sister, Mrs. Core Cooler, Berkeley, Calif. Fu nerel services will take place from Oe Moss burden Funeral Home In Corvallls at a later dale. Ward'a Klamath Funeral flomo In charge. SHADDUCK MAY SHADDUCK. SI, resident tor U Veers, died In Secramenlo Oct. 2. 161. Survivors: daughters. Mabel O'Brien, North Highland. .Calif., Edith Ashurst, Ale. Arli.f sons. Morris, Ervln, Luey, Fred, Pale end William, this city; It ' grandchildren, 1 great-grendchlldren. Fu neral Monday, Oct. 30, Ward's Klamath Funeral Home, Rev. Werren fsechmen offlciotlng. Interment, Klemefh Memorlel .Park. HANKA HOWARD FRANK HANKA, el. resident Hot 21 years, died In Salem, Ore., Oct. 36, IMI. Survivors: wife. Edith, this City; son, Charles. Detroit, Mlch.i daughters, Mrs. Don Johnston, Keno, Mrs. Relph Stearns Jr.. Mallni sister, Mrs. Emma Fisher, Creede, Colo.t four grandchildren. Funerel Mondey, Oct, 30, Word's Klam alh Funerel Home at t p.m., Ray. Ralph Richardson officiating. Interment, Bter rial Hills Memorial Gardens. "ST r ( caMJisi Community. j j; Calendar : First previewed at the Camp Fire Golden Jubilee Conference in I960, the resulting films have been thoroughly tested and tried. In fact, the producers threw out one film strip because it was not quite what they wanted. Just what the "Scrollfilm seeks to accomplish can be bet ter explained by the titles. T b e first, called Girls Grow Up, summarizes in symbolic art the experiences and changes in atti tudes of a girl moving from child' hood to womanhood, Miss Mur ray explained. "The films are subtle, depicted in charming, drawn people and beautiful scenes, she continued. "The purpose and result is that the silent scenes draw out the lookers-on for conversation. "And that's what the producers had in mind. The films are ideal for showing to small groups, then following with discussion The second strip, entitled "Help ing Girls Get Together," dem onstrates the democratic process es a leader goes through when working with girls, particularly the junior high age level. "Working Together Through Committees," the third film, was designed to aid groups of adults and adolescents working together. Definitely not a rundown Robert's "Rules of Order," the film portrays the feelings of peo ple working together. Impression istic people depict the cautious, the passive and the free-wheeling types. While the new type film was developed by the Camp Fire Girls as an inexpensive and easy-to- The changes actually resulted in increasing the overall budget for the biennium from $102,383, 452 to $108,874,410 an increase of $4,625,598., i This budget forecast would, if realized, result in a state fund deficit of- $464,745. It also would increase the amount of county money needed by $248,287 and the amount of federal money by $3,827,926. Actinff Welfare Director Andrew Juras explained that technically the budget is Increased. The changes adopted by the commission could, he said, result In considerable state and county fund savings if realized. He explained that the federal government supplies federal mon ey for public assistance on a matching basis so that (he amount of money in the state program actually governs the size of the program. The federal government, he said, operates on an open end budget for public assistance. In its action Friday the com mission also agreed, that after Jan. 1, 1962, it would again re view the whole budget and pos ibly recast It then to avoid a deficit, and to stay within the state appropriation, which was some $43 million. Juras said 'at that time the commission could choose among several alternatives. He said could reduce Aid to Dependent Children by 3 Is per cent per grant for 18 months; reduce all programs 1 per cent; ask the State Emergency Board for morel money; ask the 1963 legislature for a deficiency appropriation, or possibly get more, federal money if Congress acted to provide it. HALLOWEEN PARTY Sunday from 7 to 8:43 p.m. the youths of the Zion Lutheran Church from third graders on up are invited to Halloween par ty at the church, sponsored by the Walther League. The party will be held in the parish hall Ve Yelcome Merchant's Accounts The lank f Klamath Falls ll HKgllv wtieti ene) areted by yaur feltew.ausl nessmen, who knew antl receanlie yegr b a k I tl tj needs. You fat batter, fett er service karat BBflK "7J KIRPRTH FBUS Se. 6th I Klamath Member P.D.I.C. 6ur4ay.'Oetobr 0. OKI operate motivational medium, the strips can be used effectively by other groups, for instance by girl counselors and by clubs, said Miss Murray who is in the process of introducing it to tife 52 Camp Fire Councils in her five-state North western Area. . An audio visual aids class, taught by. L. E. Butler in the college extension program at Klamath Union High School, will also view one of the films at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 31. While the "new idea" is bound to spread and benefit 'other or ganizations, Miss Murray, a for mer Aberdeen, Wash., Camp Fire Girl herself, is justly proud of the development of her organization and its "continuing improvement philosophy. Park Group Talks Water An address by Gov. Mark 0- Hatfield and an exploration into the value of water to park devel opment will be two highlights of the Second Annual County Park Conference Nov. 2 in Salem. Representatives from . most of Oregon's 38 counties are expected to attend the one-day meeting sponsored by the Parks and Rec reation Division of the Oregon State Highway, Department, and the Oregon County Park Associ ation. Tillamook County Commis sioner A. H. Tilden and State Recreation Director Clayton E. Anderson will share chairman's duties for the session in the State Capitol Building. In noting that 26 Oregon coun ties now have park systems and several of the remaining 10 are considering establishing a park: program, Anderson has called the county park movement "the fast est growing recreation develop ment in Oregon today. He pre dicted it would be a major in fluence on future recreation in the state. Revere Panel Loses Member SALEM APJ - The panel of Republican congressmen sched uled to fly Into Oregon for Tues day and Wednesday speeches lost a member today. Rep. Peter H. Dominick, R-Colo., had to bow out to attend House Interior Com mittee hearings in Denver. Other members will go ahead with the trip. Others are Con gressmen Robert P. Griffin, Mich igan; Charles E. Goodell, New York;' and John Anderson, Ill inois. They will be at Klamath Falls, Medford and Eugene on Tuesday and Portland and Pendleton on Wednesday. iDviuiiTiwtel U.J3i3LKfJL ONLY! BEGINS OCT. 31 Wu V bUILD BABY'S ( mih ALBUM W,TH 11 P?' w ''Hi pixy pin.uk ixciustvnv at mnniyi HOURS: TUES. THRU SATURDAY Iiceet Frl. . t:I0 $ 30 Friday Noen until pS; SOMETHING NEW Janet Murray, regional director of Camp Fire Girls, Inc., holds strip of "Scrollfilm," newly developed visual elds medium, which will be shown to Klamath Council Camp Fire workers Monday. Alton Baker, Prominent Newsman, Dies In Yakima YAKIMA (AP)-Alton F. Baker, 67, Eugene, Ore., a member of a prominent newspaper familly, died Friday, apparently from a heart ailment. Baker, who had been a news paper publisher at Eugene, Ore., for 34 years until his retirement last spring, collapsed at a hotel while in Yakima for a Boy Scout meeting'. Long active in the Scouts, he had returned from a New York City meeting of the Scouts, two days ago. His eldest son, Alton F. Baker. Jr., took over an editor and pub lisher of the Eugene Register- Guard last year when Baker stepped down. The elder Baker became chairman of the board. His father, Elbert H. Baker, was founder ot the Cleveland Plain Dealer. A nephew, Elbert H. Baker II and two nieces, Mrs. George F. Russell and Mrs. Bruce Kelly, have been associated with the News-Tribune in Tacoma. Baker became publisher of the Eugene Guard in 1027 and bought the rival morning Register in 1031, merging the papers. He leaves the widow, four sons and a daughter In Eugene, a brother, Elbert Jr., in Cleveland and a sister, Mrs. Louise Hast ings, in Cleveland. Three of the sons are active in the Register-Guard Alton F. Jr. as editor and publisher; Edwin as general manager, and Richard as managing editor. Another son, Herbert, formerly was with the newspaper, but turned to medi DAYS ONLY! BEGINS OCT, cine and now is studying at the University of Oregon medi cal school at Portland. The widow, the former Mildred Moody, was with him at the time of death. They were married in 1919. Henley High Plans Meet A student body reunion for those who attended Henley High School between 1923 and 1945 is in the planning stage. Committees will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Nov. l, in the school cafeteria to gather names and addresses of anyone who at tended during those years. The reunion will not be confined to graduates. Teachers during those years will also receive invitations. Everyone Interested Is urged to attend to help get the .ball roll ing.' ' '' The first graduate of Henley High School, Earl Dumm, lives at Springfield. Mrs. W F. (Frances) Hilyard has compiled a history of the school. The summer of 1962 has been set for the get-together and .plans call for a banquet ana picnic dur ing the reunion weekend. Mrs. Robert H. (Ruth Durant) Trelease will chairman the event. Beautiful 5x7" photograph, for only U W natural V tmlUt. Do your baby-brassing with a beau tiful photo , v ."worth more than a thousand words." Get a completely finished photograph for only 69 You will not be urged to buy but if you wish the remaining poses they're youra for 1.35 for the first, 1.25 for the 2nd and 1 for any additional AM UMtT 5 years. One or two children per family will be photographed singly for B91 each for the first picture. Each additional child under five, 1.60. I'Higs Antarctic fte Projects Gsts Umtarway Editor's Note: Frank Carey, Associated Press science writer, is one of a 'group of newsmen leaving today to cover the 'latest American scientific research proj ect in Antarctica. A native of Lowell, Mass., Carey has been with the AP since 1938 and has won several awards for science writing, including the George Westinghouse - American Associa tion for the Advancement of Science award. He was a Nieman fellow in journalism at Harvard in 1946-47. By FRANK CAREY WASHINGTON (API A group1 of American and foreign newsmen and 25 Navy Seabees took off Sat urday for the onefcrea in the world where the United States and the Soviet Union have reached agree-' ment about banning nuclear weap ons tests the ice-capped antarc tic. The newsmen were headed for the world's most remote and least known continent to qover the first phase of the most ambitious-scien tific program yet undertaken by the United States in the antarctic. Some 200 researchers are par ticipating in the antarctic scientif- mission, sponsored by the National Science Foundation. The Navy, under Operation . Deep Freeze 62, is furnishing logistical and other support to the mission American scientific efforts dur ing this year's projects will range from the first geological recon naissance of one of the largest unexplored mountain chains on earth the Sentinel Range of the; Ellsworth Mountains about 8001 miles from the South Pole to new studies of solar flare radiation one of the most serious menaces to space travelers. There also will be a wide varie ty of other studies in the fields of biology, geology, glaciology, gravity, mapping, meteorology, oceanography, Upper atmospheric pnysics, and seismology. Ihe Seabees, members of the Navy's Mobile Construction Bat talion, Davisville, R.I., are the latest units to leave this country to join the Navy s Deep Freeze (orces. Including elements already IEws W fey ' - by Pat Rush IN THE I930'5 YOU WOULD HAVE HAD TROUBLE FINDING THE FEW AVAILABLE FROZEN. F0ODS.TODAY THERE ARET M.ORE THAN 500. ADVERTISING HELPED, TO MAKE FR02EN FOODS POPULAR -AND GAVE YOU MANY TIMES MORE TO CHOOSE PROM. HIGH P0WJER-L0WC08T IN 1920, LOW OCTANE GASOLINE COST 30 CENTS A GALLON BEFORE TAXES. ADVERTISING SOLD CARS AND TRUCKS, PUSHED RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, HELPED REDUCE THE PRICE OF GAS! "on the ice." they will number more than 3.000 men, 10 ships and more than 30 aircraft during the coming year. The 1961-62 American scientific effort in the antarctic, together with similar ones by the Soviet Union and several other countries will mark the first intensive stud ies undertaken by the nations since the signing last December; of the 12-nation Antarctic Treaty. This ruled that the continent is to be maintained only as a peace ful "scientific laboratory." The treaty guarantees nonmili- tarization of the great continent1 and specifically bans tests of nu clear or any other kind of weapon Even, nuclear explosions designed for peaceful purposes ate pro- niDiied until and unless some in ternational agreement is reached on the subject. The same goes tor disposal of radioactive wastes from peacetime atomic energy! programs in various parts of the world. Buses May it Runs PORTLAND (AP) - The Rosej City Transit Co may discontinue operations next week, general manager Raymond I. Perkins said Friday. The bus company's contract with the Motor Coach Employes Union expires at midnight Tues day. The firm's city permit ex pires the same day, and the un ion has vetoed any extension of the existing contract. Perkins said there apparently is "no possibility of the continu ance of our operations beyond. . . the date our present contract ex pires." The transit company said it could not gel an extension of its city permit until' an agreement could be reached with the union. Perkins said the union is ask ing increased wages and fringe benefits which would total S1.25 million. ti ,pREM'UMj 1 v; 1 I CIZll 'Sk ; ,maii m , IslfaifseeeeaaeaeeeeeJSBeeaeBeseaesisesiei PROMOTION OFFICIALS Chaplain Ralph Richardson and U. Merle Jackson, left to right, presided at cadet promotion ceremonies of the Civil Air Patrol recently. CAP, for young people, 14 to 18 years, meets Mondey nights at 7 p.m. at Summers Lane School. Johnson Warns Soviets Of U.S. Determination GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson has issued a blunt warning to the Soviet Union that the United States will use the full force of its growing military might to pre serve its freedom. "History shows that free men stand firm in the defense of free dom," he said in a University of Florida homecoming talk Friday night, "they do not know surren der, and they do not submit, what ever the cost." Coupled with his strong words on the Soviet threat was an ap peal for naUonal unity in the bat tle against communism. He de clared in indirect reply to critics of President Kennedy that "America can be defeated by ir responsible, arrogant . partisan ship." The vice president said the United States and the free world could not be defeated militarily The Mt. Washington Carriage Road, 100 years old this year, is the oldest toll road in the United States still in operation. A. A. Soule, M. D. Office Open 1939 Main Home visits Forenoons Nit. w sgs "ik mi : II ek' 7 (T Vl i IUV7 . .l'lWf( : ."V A TISSUE ISSUE! FACIALTISSUE THAT COST 60 CENTS A PACKAGE ONLY 10 YEARS AGO CAN NOW BE BOUGHT FOR 19 CENTS BECAUSE OF MASS PRODUCTION AND MASS DEMAND, STIMULATED BY ADVERTISING. or economically and the Soviet Union might be taking one of the biggest and most ill-advised gam bles in world history by its strong stand on Berlin. "This gamble could well go down in history as the greatest miscalculation ever made," he said in a talk delivered at the. Blue Key banquet. j PART TIME TOY ROUTE VERY SMALL STARTINO CAPITAL GOOD INCOME OPERATB PROM HOME SEVERAL CHOICE TERRITORIES AVAILABLE SOON KLAMATH FALLS plus - Sivirat elhtr tir-tit Wt will appoint ttnetrt man or woman to sarvlec number of ten tallonal salf-itrvlca "TOY SHOP" Diiplayi located in markets, druf, variety itorei, etc. Each "TOY SHOP" ams money. Simply replace toy each week and collect money. REQUIRES ONLY FEW HOURS EACH WEEK This is not a lob but o chance to oel into something you may have always wanted a business of your own. One that can be handled in spare time and Hill leave room (or full time ex pansion, NOT A GET-RICH- ' QUICK-SCHEME If you have a desire to better your self If sober honest, and really sincere, have a car minimum S2fi required, apply at once, giving com plett details about yourself, phone number. Airmail or wire: TOY MERCHANDISING CORP. 34-10 Sltti Street Woodsido 77, New York Keep Rolling Ahtad