9feiU 4u3CW, TOamefix TK: Or.
Tuesday. OclAdt t, VP
Amputee Convinced Being Handicapped
"State Of Mind' And Can Be Mastered
"I am convinced that being
handicapped is a state of mind.
You can let it destroy you or you
can master it."
That is the philosophy that
that has carried John Paul Tribe,
an amputee, to the responsible
post lie has today as a sou sci
entist with the Soil Conservation
Service in Klamath County.
John Tribe walks up and down
hills, crosses valleys and
swamps, swims and rides down
river rapids without a qualm,
asking aid from no man. He also
learned to fly after his injury
that cost him a leg, fractured
skull, a badly injured arm,
broken ribs and other broken
bones. It happened while he was
on maneuvers in this country
during World War II.
He gives the credit for his de
termination to make a place in
the world and live a normal life
to his wife, Mary, whom he says
Rites Held
At Lakeview
LAKEVIEW Bonnie Lee Rob
inson, 31, died Oct. 5 at the Lake
view Hospital and funeral serv
ices were held Oct. 8 from the
full Gospel Church in Lakeview.
Ttev. Obed Mark officiated.
Born May 25, 1932. in Ar
kansas, she had lived in Bly
and in Lakeview since 1951. On
Jan. 20, 1950, she was married
at Malvern. Ark., to Tony
Robinson, who survives.
Also surviving in Lakeview are
six children, Jimmie, Paul, Clcn,
Loretta, Bonnie, and Elizabeth;
her mother, Mrs. Lena McBur-
nett; three brothers, J. C. Mc
Burnett and Menson McBurnett
of Pine Bluff, Ark., and Jack
McBurnett of Missouri; three sis
ters, Matte Critcs, of Malvern,
Verla Golden and Virgie Maybur
ry of Kingland, Ark.
The body was shipped to the
Atkinson Funeral Home in Mal
vern for burial in Grant County,
Ark.
A mine in Louisiana contains
enough salt to supply the world's
needs for centuries.
pulled him from a morass of self,
pity and helped set him on the
road to a successful career. x
At present, with others he is
engaged in a soil survey that
involves the analysis of 56 soils
and 400 variations which deter-
mintes characteristics and prop
erties and capabilities for pro
duction, all vital information for
farmers.
He swims like a fish and in
stead of walking 50 miles as was
advised by the Kennedy enthusi
asts as a morning tonic, Tribe
for the U.S. Bureau of Reclama
tion, the first amputee hired by
ine usbii in North Dakota. He
was the first amputee in West
Virginia to get a pilot's license.
Mr. and Mrs. Tribe came to
Oregon in 1953 to be employed
oy tne son conservation service
and to enter into community ac
tivities. He was one of the first
ampulees to be hired by this
bureau.
The Tribes, John and Marv,
have no (ear of river boating,
snooting tne rapids or recovery
in a whirlpool. They have taken
a 187-mile trip down the San
Juan River, spending seven days
on the water, plan a rougher one
when a young son, Kim. now 6
(named for Rudyard Kipling's
Mm) is a strong enough swim
mer. The family also hopes to at
tend the eighth annual Interna
tional Soil Science Congress in
Bucharest next year.
John Tribe offered his story of
accomplishment to be used dur
ing Employ The Handicapped
Week, Oct. 6 through Oct. 12. as
proof that a handicapped person
can be a usefu' citizen, holding
his own in a competitive world.
"Laugh and the world laughs
with you." says John Tribe and
he practices what he preaches.
JOHN TRIBE
has a goal of 50 swimming miles.
has chalked up 21 of them ir
the Red Cross swim program.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Tribe are
Red Cross swim instructors, he
offering the knowledge he has
gained to other handicapped per
sons, bolstering morale and teach
ing technique. She is Red Cross
water safety chairman in the
county. During 1957 the couple
was sent by the Klamath Basin
Red Cross Chapter to Camp Tule-
quoia, Calif., 50 miles east of
Fresno to train and teach handi
capped to swim during a 10-day
period.
Comparing record swim times
years ago could swim a mile in
37 minutes. He nearly matches it
today with a time of 44 minutes
Following his injury and after
he married he went to West Vir
ginia University, graduated from
Iowa State with a BA degree
in agronomy, and went to work
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Good, Clean Notebook Essential To Student
Thats funny. M.Vlimf4KW WUIN'Mf .'
Northwest Duck Supply
Reported More Plentiful
Autopsy Shows
Cause Of Death
BEATTY-Cause of death of Or
ville Davis, 59, w ho collapsed and
died Oct. 2 in his trailer home
in Beatty was determined Mon
day to have been caused by lobar
pneumonia following an autopsy
Mr. Davis had lived in Beatty
much of his lifetime.
Funeral services were Tues
day, Oct. 8, at 1 p.m. in Assem
bly of God Church, Beatty. Rev
Vince Bodner officiated. Final
rites and interment were in Masc
kesket Cemeterv.
Regional Director Paul T.
Quick of the Bureau of Sport
Fisheries and Wildlife of the
Fish and Wildlife Service, De
partment of the Interior in Port
land, has announced that the
overall duck supply is more plen
tiful this year for the openuig
of the waterfowl hunting season
in the Pacific Northwest than it
was last year.
Quick reminded hunters that
the waterfowl hunting season
opens at 12:30 noon Standard
Time or 1 p.m. Pacific Daylight
Saving Time on Oct. 8, 1963 in
Oregon, and on Oct. 12, 1963 in
Washington.
This year as a result of better
waterfowl production in the Pa
cific Flyway, a longer hunting
season has been granted. Duck
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and goose migrations appear to be
a little laie in arriving, although
geese have been reported in the
Klamath Basin of Oregon and
California. Most of these ducks
are pintails and the geese are
white-fronts. Water conditions in
Warner Valley are better this
year than they have been for
the past several years and many
ducks are there. To date the ar
rival of geese in the Summer
Lake, Sauvies Island, and Silver
Lake areas are under last year.
In the Yakima Valley, Wash
ington, a good number of ducks,
mostly mallards, have been ob
served in the Sunnyside district,
and numerous wood ducks along
the Yakima River. In Spokane
County and adjacent areas a fair
number of ducks are available.
The prospects for hunting in the
Columbia Basin, particularly in
the Winchester and Frenchman
Hills Wastcways and Potholes
area are good, but the ducks are
scattered. Here the weather has
been warm and dry and the birds
are dispersed on to grain stubble-
fields. Mallards and widgeons
are the predominant species, and
these numbers are about on a par
for this time of the year. A nor
mal opening can be expected for
duck hunting in the Skagit, Dun
geness, Willapa, and Grays Har
bor areas. In those latter areas,
few migrant geese have been
noted to date.
By The Reading Laboratory
Written for
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Before we start talking about
the best ways to handle text
books and tests, there's just one
more item we have to cover
the materials you need for ef
fective study.
The notebook is the most im
portant piece of equipment you
need as a student. This might
sound a little elementary, but too
many students get into course
difficulty because they don't keep
the right kind of notebooks, or
don't keep them in the right way
or don t keep notebooks at all.
Get yourself a notebook for
each course, preferably the kind
with the coiled wire binding
they lie flat (or easy reading
and writing and the pages are
easily removable.
Above all, keep the notebook
clean. When you take notes in
class, take them quickly but take
them as neatly as possible
unless you plan to roeopy them.
There's no more pitiable sight
than the student who has taken
ultra-complete class notes only
to find that when it comes time
to study he can't read them.
If you re a doodler (and who
isn't? I. get into the habit of
carrying a doodle book with you.
Just get an extra notebook, bring
it to class, and if the work that
day is such that you don't have
to take notes, then doodle in your
doodle book. Again, this might
sound elementary, but there's
nothing more unpleasant than
studying from a scribbled-up note
book. Whenever you're seized
with an uncontrollable urge to
doodle, have jour doodle book
handy; it'll save a lot of note
books. After you buy the doodle book,
save up some more and invest
in a vocabulary notebook. When
ever you run across a new word,
write it down. Then once a week
you can look up all of the week's
new words in the dictionary. And
after you look them up, use them.
You'll impress all of your
friends and teachers if
you keep a good vocabulary note
book.
Remember a few chapters back
when we talked about all of the
outside reading that you're going
to do? Sure you do. You're read
ing a nonrequired book and one
of the better magazines for at
least 15 minutes a day. Right'
Well, if you're really enterprising
you might also get a notebook
for all of the new ideas you're
getting from that outside read
ing.
Finally, if you're In a spending
mood, a set of 3x5 flash cards
can be a great help for learning
foreign language vocabulary.
Write down the new word on
one side of the card, its English
equivalent on the other.
We'll talk more about note
taking later. For now, just re
member that a textbook has a
lot of pages. If you can start
to keep most of what you have to
know in notebooks, you can save a
lot of reading at the end of each
term.
(Next: The first thing to do
with a textbook.)
"Better Grades" Reader Service
co Herald and News
Box 941
Klamath Falls, Oregon
Please send me copies of
30 DAYS TO BETTER GRADES at $1 each.
Name
Address
City , State
Weary American Explorers
End Ill-Fated Mexican Trip
Style Show
Will Display
Wool Items
NHVfl '01 '339 '9 '31)1309 'S ')DOWWVH 'f '3DNVWf
wv i 'hvd 'i 'aooa 'i "Ma n33invd u '03N c
vwvn '8 'X13 l 'wooaa -s 'hdhv e o"v 'saa.ss.v?
CHIHUAHUA, Mexico (UPD ,why these large boulders were
Benefits Jump
For Gl Widows
WASHINGTON (UPI I Approxi
mately 122,700 widows of men
who died during or as a result
of military service will get in
creases averaging from 8 to 10
per cent in their compensation
checks, effective at once.
The raise resulted from a gen
eral military pay boost that be
came law last week and a sep
arate widows' benefits bill that
was signed into law by President
Kennedy yesterday.
Results of the 1363 Make it
Yourself With Wool home sew
ing contest in the Klamath Basin
will be seen Sunday, Oct. 27
when young seamstresses will
m o d o 1 the garments they
have made for the public. The
style show is planned for Sunday
afternoon in the city library.
Judges will complete their work
on Saturday, Oct. 26, also at the
city library.
Any garment made during tnis
vear up to the judging date may
be entered. All girls who have
made a suit, ensemble, skirt,
coat or dress in one of the divi
sions, 13 years through 21
years Is eligible to compete for
one of the line prizes.
The national winner will rc
ccive a 14-day tanonean vaca
tion, including Jamaica, the Vir
gin Islands, Puerto Rico, via Pan
American jet clipper. This prize
goes to the winners of both junior
and senior divisions. Numerous
prizes totaling $35,000, will also
be given.
The contest is sponsored Dy tne
Women's Auxiliary to the Nation
al Wool Growers' Association and
the American Wool Council.
Interested girls may obtain en
try blanks at Miller's and- Don
nie's Yardanc.
The leader of an abortive expe
dition into the wild Barranca de
Cobrc country said Monday bould
ers "as large as houses" in a
treacherous 120 mile river (Rio
Urriquel forced his party of
American adventurers to turn
back.
Dr. John L. Cross, 45, of Orcm,
Utah, who organized the expedi
tion to gain scientific information
said his part of fifteen Americans
made it only 10 miles up the riv
er before food ran low.
"I am definitely contemplating
another try at the Rio Urrique,
he said. "However, if I make
another try it will be up another
section of the river.
Cross and 13 other persons in
his party, including two women
traveled by train during tile night
from Creel, Mexico, and arrived
at Chihuahua early Monday.
lames C. Dean of Salt Lake City
had staggered to civilization Sat
urday and said the expedition
might be lost and without food,
Rationed Food
Cross said his party never ran
out of food, but had to do some
rationing.
The explorers including three
Mexicans arrived safely Monday
at the northwestern Mexican vil
lage of Creel, 160 miles west of
Chihuahua. Creel is a railhead on
the New Chihuahua al Pacifico
Railroad. They left for Chihua
hua at 7 p.m. EDT Monday night.
Cross said he was mystified
that large boulders were in the
river. I
"I look an aerial survey in J
August and do not understand i
not spotted," he said
He said that while they were
in the Barranca de Cobre (Cop
per Canvonl they saw only one
search plane, but could not at
tract its attention with a large
fire.
Dean Greeted Train
Dean, accompanied by his
nurse, got out of a hospital bed
to greet the party at the train.
The men in the party were un
shaven, but in good spirits. They
said they were tired and wanted
to go to bed.
Cross said he would hold
press conference later Monday and
asked reporters to please let him
get some sleep. Cross personally
thanked two helicopter pilots
from the U. S. Air Force Rescue
Service who attempted to find
the party.
Cross said the only thing he re
gretted about the trip was that
'we did not have enough time
to complete it. We were running
late and most of the party had
to return to the states for busi
ness commitments. We are grate
ful for the concern of the people
in the U. S."
The group entered the canyon
of strange winds, rapid water
and gnarled crevices where the
sun has never reached on Sept.
25.
An aerial search was launched
immediately when Dean report
ed the party was having trouble.
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