Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1960)
FACE FOURTEEN HERALD AM') NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore Monclav, March 21, lflfiO "It".- SJ- !' 7 ..i i iriii mill JOHN PEDERSON Mission Leader Given New Post John f'odersun, supervisor of the Klamath I-'ulls (iosiK'l Mission, luis been elected to I he presidency of the Internalion.'il Lnum oi oospei Missions of llic Nurlliwesl-.l'acilic District, 'flic area enihraees Ore Ron, Washington, Montana, Ida hn and Canada to C'aluarv. lie will take olliee June 1. His immediate duties will include at tendance at the International Con vention in Charleston, South Caro lina, in May and an executive committee session in Pittsburgh in October. Delinquency To Double, Says Judge PORTLAND fAI'J Juvenile delinquency in the United States tvill double in the next 10 years, Juvenile Judge Philip I), Gilliam of Denver, Colo., predicted here Friday. The noted juvenile j'idge fold the Oregon Kducation Assn. con vention that "a new kind of crime is sweeping the nalion." "People claim it's all right to he a little hit of a thief, to do a little wrong," he said. "The be lief seems to he 'Never get sore about anything. Don't fight the racketeer; you'd just get hurt.' " Judge Gilliam said he had asked hoys in his court room why they stole and he said they had replied: " '1 didn't want to be a square.' " lie said 10 years ago the num ber of girls who came into his court room wanting to give away illegitimate children varied Irom 10 to 12 a month but now there are fill to Ml each month. "We'll have delinquency as long as we have people who don't care, sloppy homes, people who excuse wrong - doing, poorly trained teachers, lilthy imiga.incs and violent television programs. "Wo are dealing with thousands of people who say 'Somebody will take care of us.' The slogan is Buy now, pay later; live it up.' Another speaker. Supennlen dent of Schools Martin Essex i( Akron, Ohio, lold the Oregon Assn of School Administrators, meet ing as a part of the OKA con vcntion, that Russian teachers have a belter opportunity than most U. ti. teachers for achieving quality. the (.onmmnisl emphasis on learning, he said, "has elevated the teacher to a position of pres tige in the Soviet Union. " "The leacher," he said, "is con ceived of as a professional, and his pay is comparable to that of the engineer, architect or scien tisl. "Teaching is such an attractive occupation that Soviet pedagogi cal institutes have three to live tunes the number of applicants they can admit . "But the teacher in Hussia is not merely granted position and rewards he niu.-t earn them. Each Hussian leacher must take a competitive examination every five years. The lest determines whether or not the teacher is en titled to a salary increase, and it may also decide whether or not lie will be allowed to continue in the profession. "Although they teach six days a W'eek, Itussian teachers enjoy a more manageable load than their counterparts in (his country. The secondary school instructor, lor example, leaches only three pe riods a day. This permits the kind ol intensive work that is cxpovted of them " H I IS AS SNfMII'l-: It CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. UPI A houscvvite resigned her cen sus laker's job because. "1 sim ply couldn't bung myself to ask my neighbors all those giving questions," the Chattanooga cen sus office reported Friday. KLAMATH AUDITORIUM 2:00 & 8:00 SAT.-, MAR. 24 I J if 4 ... ard a A MAN-EATER, nailed in Indochina last year by Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Shelp, came meekly into Klamath Falls Friday as a tigerskin rug. He is shown here with his slayers where he died, and even then, he looked all 10-plus feet a killer. Festival Of Arts Set For La Grande Bv KITH KINO Persons prominent in civic and educational circles in La Grande and ICastern Oregon College are nromotini! an Indian Festival of Arts to he held in I.a Grande June 2:1 through June 311. Billy Impressed By Holy Land AMMAN. Jordan 'APi-Kvan- gelist Hilly Granam. after visiting the holy places around Jerusalem for the first time, said they are 'even more impressive than I imagined." In a farewell message lo .lor- dan published in the Jerusalem Times, lie said; "1 had expected the beauty of this country to be remarkable, but it is much more than remarkable, it is truly spec tacular." ItADIO I OR HMDS WASHINGTON UPI The Federal Communications Commis sion has authorized the use of tiny radio transmitters mounted on ame birds lo trace their move ments. The announcement Friday was headed, "radio has really he come something for (he birds." 9th & Pine Slfiw ...but only for the All-Mew Riverside J SAFETY MYLOM TIRE New wider treodl More Deep-Gripping . .'"" edges! Modern profile design! All this plus A ,T'-'-"''.. tough DuPonl Nylon cord for greater protec- Ka "'.'l"',." lion ogainst impact breaks ond water damage, ij r""l".'-''t""l!" ' full 20-monlh road haiard guarantee. IjkA '..'"' NO CASH DOWN Your trade-in tire it the ;.,"'" down payment! FREE, FAST TIRE MOUNTING. V' V-lji"?rAMTY.mOM IU8EUSS BLACK I TUBE-TYPE 81ACK llil piii. D(h I Sntfl piiit i livl ptin Mill Salt piic. y-' ''jrrft!' M Sli. bffoit Itadf-in with Imdp-i. b.l.i. ttod.-in with tiadt-ip rT:,vjr'' tjCt, L $iM pl.i.uiwln I pl.itim.toi plat mt ! ' plot fidtt loi g'Jjff 470.1S M.4$ , IS... .JI.9S; 1S..: fSSgj9 ibT4i.a'Q.3 7tMS 10... I whll.w.ll In yM .il.l $30 to 35 TRADE-IN on Ford, Chevrolet, Plymouth remanufactured engines Reg. 204.95 The festival is planned to en courage talented tribal members to lurlher ability in ait. A line exhibit of both ancient and contemporary art will he on dis play and Eastern Oregon College of Kducation will present an out standing Indian artist in voice, in strumental, a choir or fine lec turer and. as a climax to end the week-long festival, church .services on the college campus. Mrs. Marion Gridloy. author of "Indians of Today" and editor ol the "Amerindian." an Indian re view, is assisting in contacting In dian artists. Her address is ill) W. Washington Street, Chicago 2. Illinois. Anyone interested m a y reach her there. Officers elected arc Wallace .V Hastings, minister of the First Christian Church. I.a Grande, pres ident; C. Keith Mills, minister. Methodist Church. La Grande, vice president; John M. Miller, proles sor of education, Eastern Oregon College and financial adviser for the college, treasurer; Gladys Bi- liee Price, editor of .iin-Mip-i- Sheek, secretary. Also offering assistance with the new project arc C. J. Short, editor. Eastern Oregon Review; Mrs. Ca therine Snider, president of Sorop- timists and other organizations; 42-51 Chev. 1 e;o ,95 'with trod Reg. 249.95 Ply mouth, 1941 - 53 189.95' Reg. 314.95 Ford V-8 1949 . 5? 209.95 New, 4-ring atumi- num pitions, new V rinni. maraund crankshaft, new bearings, new timing chain or geor ... up to 212 moior new part; in every engine. Mrs. Kenneth Williamson, of In dian heritage: Knineth Lilian! president La Grande Chamber of Commerce and manager of KLMIt radio, and Mrs. J. Kdward Poitra Portland, member of the Klamath Indian Tribe. To raise funds for award:; lo be presented for outstanding art work. some l.VUHI copies of a hand somely illustrated brochure. Nun- Mip-Ni-Sheek 'We Iteniemberi in the Ncz Perce language.' printed for the Itiritl .National Indian J-;n campmcnl at Pendleton, are to be put on sale in various places in Oregon lor $1. The cover, in color, is a portrait of Saya-piim, or Thelma Parr fteick, of the Cayuse and Walla Walla tribes, descendant of the lirst Cayuse chief, Wa-la-mat-kin. She is the wife of Charles Keick of Pendleton, and Pendleton Round up Princess in 1948. The brochure contains the story, part, of the American Indian, and the great tribes of the North west, illustrated by excellent pho tography in color and black and white, biographies of some of the great chiefs and poetry contribut ed by Oregon residents. Interested local persons m a y write lo Nun-Mip-Ni-Shcck, Box I'.i'i, La Grande. Oregon. Phone TU 4-3188 1 6.70-15 block tubt-typt plus excite lax and your old tire. RIVERSIDE COATED MUFFLERS 1 W --'X&isTV Installation arranged Fit 55-54 Ford Fairlane, 49-52 ChrOrolet and OeSoto, 0-57 Chev. 6. Equal tqior better than original equipment. Man-Eating .Mr. and Mrs. Karl E. Shelp, formerly of lort Klamath and Chiioquin, humeri the second larg est tiRer on record last year in Indochina. Perhaps what contributed to the cat s size was the people he ale. The cat over a span of time was olamed for the deaths of 20 natives f a villase in that country. He Michigan Lad Takes Advice, Builds Heart KARMINOTON. Mich. APi Why don't you build an artificial heart? a surgeon jokingly asked a 16-year-old acquaintance. So David Randolph scratched up a plastic umbrella handle, p;.':s of an old fire extinguisher, little chunks of plywood and other odds and ends and built a work ing mcdel. The idea was sparked by Dr .lames D. Frylogle, a prominent heart surgeon in nearby Detroit. But lie says he was only half se rious when he suggested that David underiake the project. First, David buried himself in "The Surgical Clinics of .North America." a hook which illustrates a mechanical heart for humans. His next step was a study of a rat's anatomy. He read the "Transactions of American Phil osophical Society." Then he scouted lor materials. A length of stainless steel be came the crank for his hand-op erated blood pump. Rollers, made from sections of an umbrella handle, squeeze the blood along a plastic tube. The blood is warmed in a tube wrapped around a steel cylinder immersed in 'JB-degree water. A carbon dioxide cylinder holds oxygen for the blood. David used a hypodermic needle to trap any bubbles which might develop. The blond is supplied with a saline solution to keep it from coagulating. As it passes through the ap paratus, you can see blue blood taken from a rat's vein turn a healthy crimson. BIG SLIPCOVER SALE! Rush to Wards today for special savings! Styles Is $Ji2':?K'A ' CHAIR 098 WITH QO t fg SUPCOVER 7 ...COUPON 0 SOFA SLIPCOVER Regular 1 5.98 daveno cover . . . with coupon 1 3.98 "Pick any chair, sofa or daveno cover from our wide se lection of prints, solids and fone-on-tone; save en each during Wards giant slipcover sale. All covers machine O washable, tailored for lasting Jjeauty. Save now! 9th & Pine Tiger Bagged was suspected of more deaths, un- prov ed. In any event, the villagers he didn't eat, he scared off, and the hamlet, Ban-.Me-Thuot, 300 miles north of Saigon, was deserted when the Shelps got there. When they let! their Wcaverville home 50 miles northwest of fled ding tor a world tour, they dead ed they would do some big game hunting. They wanted a tiger. Fearing political situations in In iia and other countries where ti gers lurk, they nicked Indochina. They secured a Kronen guide- one of the best-. He was Vincent Pietre, a fabu. lous while hunter. J'letre shot the largest cat on record, a tiger meas uring It feet, five inches from lang to tail-tip. The animal is pre served in a Boston museum. The guide helped the Shelps set up a blind and rig some bait in a wooded area outside Ban-Me- Thuot. Mrs. Shelp waited 10 hours in the blind. Within a half hour after she was relieved of duty by her husband, the cat came prowl ing. He downed it with a .375 Win Chester slug between the eyes That was July 2. The couple sent the hide to San Francisco for tanning, and it made a stunning forepeak for their l!)3a Chevrolet when they displayed it lor Herald and News personnel rriday morning. The cocked jaws bristle with fangs. The pelt, a spectacularly mottled beige, measures 10 feet, four inches. Alive, it weighed near ly BOO pounds. The Shelps planned a long time lo take such a trip. They may do so again sometime. Mrs. Shelp is the former Mar garet Copeland of Fort Klamath. She was born there and was edu- the best chicken deserves the finest noodles Ml$$10n egg noodles r5 0198 1Q98 Plk'iW'M ll ...with coupon IV BUY AS MANY SLIPCOVERS AS YOU NEED USE ONE COUPON WITH EACH! By Former Ft. cated in Sacred Heart Academy and Chiioquin High School. Shelp used lo log a1 Pine Ridge near Chiioquin. The couple moved to Los Angeles in 1939. They sub sequently bought a motel in Wea verville. They left on tour a year ago, and returned February It. By plane, ship and tram they toured the Orient and Kurope. They ha'e two sons attending Now... more people can enjoy m if ru a DTicn KENTUCKY'S SEVEN NOTHING HAS CHANGED... EXCEPT THE PRICE! Still 7 years gentled Still a mellow 86 proof 'k -Still Kentucky's Finest Bourbon CHARTER I Tick-m-k, thk.uk . that didn't watch Straight Whiskey 86 Proof OLD for chairs, sofas, davenos Klamath Duo Oregon Technical Institute. They are Don and Patrick Shelp, auto motive and electronics students, respectively. 3-RINSES DURING EVERY WASH CYCLE WHIN 101.' DO Mil WASH AT MERIT'S COIN.O-MATtC LAUNDRY Il.l I,. MAIN IKOI M. Kill FINEST BOURBON YEARS OLD 35 Fifth $ 50 Pint . . ti BOURBON the clock for seven long years! CHARTER Distillery Co., Loulivill., Kt. Phone TU 4-3188