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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1942)
' PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON Juno 21, 1041 SUGAR ALLOTMENTS In Service WAGE BOOST SET making their home at the Japa nese reception center. Read Classified Ads for Results The memory of the invasion, the battle on the soil of our fath erland, uro branded upon us our generation will bo marked by its scar for life Plelcr S. An obstinate child may turn Every bit of rubber thnt even Gcrbranriy, prime minister of out to bo a genius, says a py- body turns over lo Unelo Sat Netherlands government In ex- clioliwlnt. That should pleano will snap nt Germany and Japn Ho. most purenls. Oh, yes and Italy, -eV L 5s iiMwaawiiMWaMiwaB'w j Restaurants, hotels, boarding houses and other institutional users of tujtar may obtain in- cresses in their sugar allotments in proportion to an increase in the number of meals they are serving, the office of price ad ministration announced today In an operating instruction to the state rationing administrator. By authorizing this relief, the OPA explained it was permitting Institutional users whose busi nesses have increased to take ad vantage of the same principle which already applies to any household where each new mem ber adds his war ration book for the use of that particular house hold. The regulations permit institu tional users to obtain 50 per cent of the amount of sugar they used each month last year, for meal serving purposes, or 80 per cent of the sugar used during each month the establishment was in business between Jan. 1941, and April 28, 1942, if the establish ment did not use sugar in each month of 1941, or the additional alternative of SO per cent of the mount of sugar they used in the month of March. . I VI ) lAIUIIIMkll Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hatch of Portland visited hers briefly last Saturday with Mrs. Hatch's brother and nephew, Harry En gle and Alfred B. Castel. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Schroe der and family of Pasadena, Tex., were recent guests of his brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. Oroville Schroeder and daughter Jacqueline, in Fort Klamath. Mrs. Bob Cable was taken to Klamath Falls hospital Satur day evening after having been seriously 111 for a week. She was reported to be resting easily on Sunday. Mrs. Cable operates the Junction lunch, service station nd camp ground one mile south f Fort Klamath. Mr. - and Mrs. Lee Ferguson and son John, of Quartz Moun tain, have moved to Sand Creek, where Ferguson will be in charge of the highway patrol, replacing Raymond Olsen, who has been transferred to the Che mult division. Earl McGreer, who has been in charge of the Chemult division of the Oregon State highway, recently joined the U.S. navy. Mr. and Mrs. John Varnum are visiting here at the home of their ton, daughter-in-law and granddaughter, Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Varnum and Miss Audrey Varnum. They spent the winter and spring near San Jose, Calif. Visiting other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Buck Thompson nd children have moved to Klamath Falls to make their home. Thompson, who has been employed here for some time as FREE PARKING! 32 Hurryl Hurry! ' i'M fj LAST PAY! Rosalind I Biiecet l Kv m LI I Rosalind hi ice t?t i f J Melvyn DOUGLAS In THIS THING CALLED LOVE" and "RHODES, THE EMPIRE BUILDER' fcj with Walter Huston TOMORROW! in. w Adventure Co-Hit! For Action and Thrills It Tops They Drive By Nlghtl" JTV 1 es, "vast? JOHN WAYNE IK 'CMiFonnm Private Aldtn A. "Shorty" Clark, former Klamath youth, is now serving at Ellington Field. Ttx. "Shorty" lived here for 18 years and for a greater part of that time drove for Hurry Cab. driver of the Laird freight truck operating between Fort Klamath and Klamath Falls, will have the Klamath Falls Alturas run of the freight line. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Johnson and children of Klamath Falls moved here last week, and Johnson will be the new driver for the freight truck here. Mrs. Kenneth Morris of hama, Ore., and her sister, Mrs. Roy Noah and her children of Brownsville, Ore., left here Sun day after visiting for a week with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Edwards. Mrs. Noah also visited with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Noah while in Fort Klamath. Mrs. Ruth Lemke and daugh ter Judy left by train from Klamath Falls Saturday night for their home in Minot, N. D., after spending a week here visiting Mrs. Lemke's sister. Miss Agnes Larsen. The C. I. will hold its an nual picnic on Sunday, June 28, at George Denton's park north of Fort Klamath. Everyone is in vited to attend the all-day picnic, at which games of various kinds will be featured. A charge of $1.29 for each family will be made, and ice cream and beer will be given to all, free of charge. Swimming In the nearby pond is expected to prove a popular diversion of the day. '" James Legget left Sunday for Portland after spending a week's vacation with his family here. Legget is employed at the Ore gon shipyards in Portland. The sacrifices and the hard ships that will be borne here at home have not even started.- Robert Patterson, Under-Secretary of war. LAKE VIEW, (Special) Wage increases of seven and one-half cents retroactive to April 1, 1842, Wcfo iicgutimcu i iv- ccnt meeting of the Lumber and Sawmill Workers' union, local 2701, AFL, according to Harold II. McKentle of Klamath Falls, representative of the' lumber and sawmill workers. Previous to this announce ment, unaffiliated local mills an nounced a similar wage increase, also retroactive to April 1. Lo cal mill owners said that the ma jority of the lumber workers In the area plan to buy war bonds with their wage Increase. Lumber companies affected are: Peterson and Johnson Lum ber company, Buzard-Burkhart Lumber company, Lakeview Logging company, and Oregon Moulding company. WAR QUIZ 1. The insignia of one divi sion of the American army is three white stripes diagonally superimposed upon a square Held of royal blue. The stripes are symbolic of three big battles in which the division too part in the last war St. Mi. hiel, Argonne and Marne. The Insignia also indicates the num ber of the division. What is itT 2. June 1, 1B02, is a very im portant date in the history of the American army. Does it mark formal formation of a standing army, founding the military academy of West Point, or a big expedition against the Indians? 3. What Henry Ford is to De troit, Karl Benz was to a Ger man city recently badly bombed by the RAF. Name the town. (Answers on Page 4) Tulelake TULELAKE Maxlne Barks, home for the summer from Stockton Junior college, has ac cepted employment at the five-arid-dime store, where Mr. and Mrs. Bob Woodman are mana gers. Word has been received here that Corporal Noyle A. Wright. attending the advanced air school at Williams field, Ariz, has been advanced to the rank of sergeant. He is the son of Mrs. A. C. Wright, Tulelake. He en listed May 21, 1941. Mrs. William Patterson and two little daughters, Patty and Dotty, have arrived to Join Cap tain Patterson, commander of the military unit at Camp New i ell. For the present they are DAY! THE SPOILERS" TOMORROW! . . ANOTHER GRAND DOUBLE ENTERTAINMENT TREAT! fi tv:r .tii r.ri i Against The Imagine the mobsters In arms against the Gesta po .. . with Bogart lead ing the fir.- works! f ... As ivpl exciting K sZsc. a story MKSj wit- ft; I'CS MOW -MM raw ALL THRU i lt!E HlliSi; Mm 9A Jan. Drw.ll R. f SHI Lr. i ff 3 Judith AMmoft m. LLJ Coming Soon! 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