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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1958)
PAGE 8 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1958 Basin Briefs Flrld Training Pfc. William I. Westfall, 19, eon of Mr. and Mr. Elwood Wilson, Route Weed, participated in field train ing at Fort Bragg, North Carolina with the 82nd Airborne Infantry Division. A 1957 Weed Hish School graduate, Westfall is a gunner. Wins Ribbon Truman P. Hall 34, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hall, 2418 Vine Street, Klamath Falls, received the Army Commen riatinn Rihhnn fnr mil slxnd'ina npr. (ormance of duties while stationed with American Land Forces in Leb anon. A 1952 graduate of Chiloquin men hcnool, nan is a specialist filth grade. He entered Army serv ice in 1953. Weekend Visitors .Mrs. Bertha Vinson, Merrill, was a weekend visitor at the home of her son hrnest Vinson, and family in Bonanza. Vacation Mrs. Louise Thurs ton, Lakcview, took care of Stcv ie C'ascbcer for two weeks as Stcv le's mother, Mrs, Lucille Lcggett, was on vacation. Visitors al the home of Mr. and iIrs. Owen Pepple of Bonanza during the last weekend of deer hunting were their son, Dick Pep pic, and family of Butte Falls and Owen Pepple's brother and sister-' Jn-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pepple of Klamath I- nils. Turkey Dinner The annual ba zaar and turkey dinner, given at the Bonanza school by members of St. Barnabas Episcopal Church of Langell Valley, will be Saturday, November 1, starling at 6 o'clock. From Merlin Mr. and Mrs. Art Monroe, Merlin, Oregon, were weekend guests at the home of Monroe s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Monroe, of Langell Valley. To Portland Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Horn of Bonanza are visit ing at the home of Mrs. Horn's daughter. Mrs. Bill Beavcrt, and family in Portland. From Medford Mr. anrl Mm W. 1. House of Medford are guests at the home of J. E. House in Langell Valley. To Squaw Flat Mr. and Mrs. Llovd Gift of Lansell Vail a spending two weeks at Squaw Flat, i ESTABLISHING AUTHORITY TUCSON, Ariz. Wl-Here's how lin unidentified Tucson teacher de scribed his method of establishing ui.-iiipnue in ins classroom: liet into your high school classroom before the class shows up the first day. Put the waste basket near the door. After the classroom is filled you march in late. Slam the door, kick the waste basket across the room and thunder in your loudest voice. 'Who left that thing In front of the door?' " r. ; ARDYTH M. CHANDLER, second lieutenant, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Borough, Sprague River, has completed the officer basic military training course for women at Lack land Air Force Base, Texas. She will be assigned to Amarillo AFB, Texas, for duty as an administration officer. Lt. Chandler, a graduate of Bonanza High School and George Fox College where she majored in English literature and the psychology of education, was awarded a direct com mission in the WAF upon completion of her college studies. She also received a BA and BS at Southern Oregon College. SURGERY DORMS Mrs. Dora Branham, Dorris, underwent major surgery for the third time in as many months at Klamath Valley Hospit al Saturday morning. Her son, Clifford Jr., flew home from his Army training station at Great Lakes, Michigan, to be at his mother's bedside. Another son. Mike. 17. is also in Klamath Val ley Hospital as the ligaments in his leg were torn in Ihc football game between Butte Valley High School and Etna High School at Etna Friday night. Mrs. Bran- ham's brother, Charles O'Donnell of Yreka, is also with her. The Loquacious Portable Editor's Note: This is one in a series of articles written by Wal traud iDictsche) Eriksdun, a for mer Klamath Falls resident, now living in Germany. By WAI.TRAL'D ERIKSDUN HEIDELBF.RG, October 22 When ragged men crawled out of German ruins 13 years ago, the prophets foresaw a century of cavemen or ants. But modern tech nical skills, peacefully used, charmed towns and cities from the ground. We crisscrossed the hard hit industrial Ruhr, where smoke rises from chimneys day and nioht. In vain we looked for win- dowlcss walls and rubbish-littered lots. "I lose my way in familiar si reels," a Duisburg resident said, "because of new buildings." We saw airy schools with mo saics and murals, outdoor swim ming pools, playgrounds with imaginative contrivances for swinging, swirling, climbing. It would seem that countless ca ANNOUNCES DRAFT CALL WASHINGTON UPIi The Army has called for 11.000 draf tees in December, the same as in the previous three months. The new call will bring to 2,- 3'l6,4:i0 the total number of men drafted since the draft was re vived after the start ot inc Ko rean War. The entire December levy will be inducted between Dec. 1 and Dec. 9 so none of the draftees will have to report for induction immediately prior to Christmas. fes were impervious to bombs. But there are innovations: under ground street crossings with lux urious shops oddly contoured concert halls for better acoustics beauty parlors glittering with mirrors and twittering with canar ies. The Essen architect Seidenstick er drove us through a suburban settlment he designed: white stuc co houses with grilled windows, rolling lawns, blue pools, purple flowers. Above the entrance to his one-story, $(i0,000 home, we were greeted by a mosaic of roosters at sunrise. "Many war weary Germans married housewives." he joked. "But I brought my wife back from Norway because Norwegians relax." Yreka Meet Held For Rotary Anns MONTAGUE Rotary Anns held a meeting at the Empire Room in Yreka recently. Hostesses for the event were Mrs. Tom Williams and Mrs. James Dillon. Mrs. Paul Rcichman entertained the group with slides showing scenes that were taken when she and her husband, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. William S. Swigart Sr., made a trip to Canada last summer. Charmingly sheathed in black and white jersey, Frau Sciden sticker led us to the living room. It featured a full-wall window, an upholstered nook, stairs to mezza nine booksnolves, and an Eriksdun oil above robust wooden Windsor table and chairs. After the maid whisked t w o adorable rolly-polly blond Eski rnoes to bed, we passed under a bas-relief to the dining room. Built-in television, lemon-cushioned bucket chairs and a blood-red Af ghanistan rug again testified to the architect's simple, elegant taste. We went through glass doors for supper under an outdoor extension of the roof, where infra-red heat ing in the mosaic ceiling and a crackling fireplace provided warmth. At war's end Coesfeld was 90 per cent destroyed. Its 20.000 in habitants crowded into surround ing farms and the 300 dwellings left. Today, brick fc: brick, houses have been rebuilt with that fideli ty to pre - war architecture which is so common in modern Germany, where the adventurous was often lost to economy to urgency and las with Gothic churches, the medieval parts of Frankfurt, the colonnade approaches to Weisbad en's casino) to tradition. On the outskirts of Coesfeld there are many new stucco villas, large and small. Here the Benno Fritz ens, who own a machine factory and five Ericksd'.ns, have a most attractive home with black-and-white pin-stripe wallpaper and. built into the floor, earth beds of ceiling high plants that follow curved glass walls. The red ceil ing of the hall is polka-dotted with glass openings for electric light. Red leather bucket chairs, and an oil of red flowers by Eriksdun, complete the picture. Future art historians may con demn such German fads as mod ernistic wallpaper doodlings a la Miro. But sociologists will praise the sunny new stucco apartment, with balcony, of a Coesfeld jani tress. In stride with standards of living which are higher than ever before, every German workingmaa now demands a bathroom, running hot water, a frigidalre. lt is man's failing to accumulatt trash. I was told many times that, except for the human toll, Ger many benefited from an enforced housecleaning. GUARANTEED Vacuum Clecner REPAIRS Specialized Service on all Makeil No Matter How Old Part, Bai, nnn in Stock Free Pick Up and Deliver? Dean's Stark's 122 So. 9th TU 4-713 N, i. ji - 3 Good Reasons Why You Should Vote For FRED H. HEILBRONNER for County Commissioner Experience in business affairs Experience in City and County Management Record of Fair Dealing at all times Adv. paid by Fred H. Hellbronner POMPON Special All Colors $1.25 Cold Carry SUBURBAN FLOWER SHOP 3614 So. oth Ph. 4-8188 NOTICE!! Lyle C. Smith Is Democratic Candidate for County Surveyor 1. Registered Professional Engineer 2. 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