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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1944)
1944 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON id hotels' ffnnnnf'imrw PACE NINE L..tff.AKE Two pioneer Iiilike lintels h,ve "Chanand I enliiP w" ,lno 'V" ,ow Cn.(crt win tnnounced Monday I'Sr'.nrf Mrs. Clyde Burks. L.r "o Clyde's hotol, who gold W"?1 runimlntfi mnnntfAr Vk. fioldon hotol, owned by jDubon, Weed. ur mud Mrs. Elmer Slonton, Zn of the Tulelnko hotel, mra"" ..... MnMfnrrl nnrl Mr I? mm. Chn'rlcs Cnrd, Grant Lit, JIIU -.- rrlll ww-1" . ii.. llnltri cn(n onH Kfj'ci n tourist pnrk nnd other r and Mm. Burkii murk one 1 ....I ..Int. Irani. ( hero in recent months, the tojtory suicco ounuing on fcta Vreel. Including the 18- r. inhhi nnd other rooms on It second floor, offices of the hlilornin wiviuii ' r,, " C. Tuinlnke nurlculturc office t'hior Mercantile, tho Cnllfor Bilrpilon ICiepnuilD uuiiiiJiiny illce and two iipnrtmenls ocrcu S.A hv Mr. nod Mrs. Wcschlcr P1-:1..' t t..i ii.... An ild Mr. niKI ir.l. uiim on wt. ,1. tfroiliui iiiiui. Th. hnlldlni! win built In b3S Mr. and Mrs. Burks lenving kclr holm-Mend, ono of tho oriKl- Ll Innrl IlluckS KOttlcd by Vt'l- fgm of World wur 1 in 1031, to Ii Into business in Tulolnke. In , i . .. .1,1 i 1 1 Kit .una BjO, B IlllK" uuuihuii wi. Ictcd. Ill "0 sumo yvar unit jydo's hotel wns built, Tony illt the Tmclnko noiei. nils linens, which Includes nine ho- I rooms, n ciun, maniiKers urlmonl nnd dlnluK room bus Fhnnuod hnnds number i iimM. Mr. nnd Mrs. Stnnton Lnlnu It for nbout a year and half. The Golden hotel, a newer Iructurc. located on Modoc Erect, Is now under tho mon- kement of Mr, and Mrs. oood- way, lormony or jneaiorn. Mr. snd Mrs. Card, who within lit past few months have pur t.ueti an acreage at . Grants fan, followlnu sale of tho vie brv cafe In Modford, which they pcrslcd for two years after lcav i Merrill, were here last week complete arrangements for as umlnit nctlvc mnnnecmont of the ulclnko hotel, Plans of Mr, nd Mrs. Hodwcs nro Indefinite, not being known hero wheth r they plnn to return to this pmmunlty. Hodges sold his pool all ond card room that he ught In Mcdford somo time Mr, nnd Mrs, Barks plan to Mve within tho next few days brsn Indefinite stay somewhere In tho const, In tho hopes of bon Kilting Mr.". Bnrks health. Mr. pd Mrs. Stanton also are leaving T Kck a lower cllmato for Mr. Union. Mrs. Cummlngs plans f isko a snort vacation before i'KUmtnil active mnnnffAment nf flyde's hotel, but plans to ro- m nere ocioro Juno 18. No consideration on either nsscllon was mado public. HE GETS CAB MEMPHIS .Tun. a inn A it VnVn. J.I LI. 1...I u .-v.,lu ihui IIIIVI'II 1119 IHAILUU J.10,000 miles nnd kept It "look f t llko new." Today tho com pany showed Its appreciation fey gnve him the cab. EVERYBODY LIKES FBESH BERRY JAM Sava Sugar and Berries with This Easy Recipe : Cops Ground Berries (Any Vnrlclr) A Cupi Sunnr 1 Packaae M.CP. P.rtta tcm nnd grind 3 quarts fully r rrm, or crush completely one fted lo pulp. Messure eisctly 6 r- crusnea berries, (add ws F lo 811 out last cup, If necessary), f ' ell and brlna to a boll, stirring j--...,,,y. nuw, add the sugar fc?ir o Jnd brlnI 10 ful1 rolling bolL f""- EXACTLY 4 MINUTES. Re jwe from flre, let boll subside, stir L. ,Mm by turns for 5 minutes. Pour fliO ltrrlll-n.t , , l ; allowing yj-incn fun I atrnwberry Jam, add K j'p juice to each 0 cups cnuhea ALONG THE LEDO R OA DFour American Red Cross (iris try out a sill trench alonr the Ledo road In northern Burm lo get used to Ihelr new environment. Left to rlht they are Maxlne Robertson, Portland, Ore.! Mary Elizabeth Kogan, Glendale,. O.; 1 Jullanna Fitch, Hudson, O.i and Olga Star Giddy, Melrose, Mass. Actress And Mare In Reconciliation J V) 7 to Tfc -' ft, 1'' J"' Mb Actress Blnnle Barnes, who announced she Intendod filing suit lor divorce lrom Capt. Miko Frankovlch, watches htm at tack a drumstick at a Hollywood party. She said thoy had made up and thoro would be no divorce. "It was just a stupid misun derstanding such aa poople sometimes have," she said, "and everything's all ironed out." (AP wirephoto). Seven Battleships Help Rip First Holes in Wall More Meat and Plenty of Vegetables Promised U. S. Three Allied Leaders Met For Pre-" D" -Day Confab By E. V. ROBERTS Representing the Combined American Press Distributed by The Associated Press ALLIED ADVANCE COM MAND POST, June 8 This quiet, tree-shaded spot was the scene of an historic pre-"D"-Day conference last Sunday, it may now be disclosed. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower met here then with Prime Min ister Churchill and the French leader, Gen. Charles De Gaulle. Also present were Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts, South African premier, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, and other important allied public of ficials and military figures. The group spent nearly two hours here, largely in the ward room tent where the walls were hung with detailed maps of the piannea iiDcraiion oi trance. Apparently the conversations Between tne supreme comman. der and De Gaulle were entirely sBUBiaciury, oecause nours la. ter Elsenhower told us there was complete agreement with the French on military levels. Apparently the tricky question CHICAGO, Juno 8 (P) There will be more meat and a "plen tiful supply" of fresh fruits and vegetables for civilians this year, tho nation's retail grocers were told today by two food industry leaders. George M. Lewis of the Amer ican Meat Institute advised the annual convention of the Na tional " Association of Retail Grocers that there'll be 145 pounds of meat for every civil ian, as compared to 137 pounds last year. The increase in fresh fruits and vegetables for civilians in 1B44 over last year was predict- By ROBERT C. WILSON LONDON, Juno 8 (P) Seven allied battleships three of them American nnd scores .of flank ing cruisers ond destroyers, In cluding revenge-thirsty French, Norwegian, Polish - nnd Dutch ships, comprised tho tnsk forces which ripped tho first breaches in Hitler's Atlantic wall. Tho bnltleshlp Texas led the western task force under Rear Admiral Alan Goodrich Kirk. Tho squadron also included the battleships Arkansas and Nev ada. The eastern force wns led by the British battleship Warspitc, und included the bulllcwagons Rodney, Riimilllcs and Nelson. 75 Per Cent British No official breakdown was given on tho warships involved, but a compilation from field dis patches showed 31, including the American cruisers Tuscaloosa, Quincy and Augusta. The Brit ish furnished 75 per cent of the larger warships from destroyers upwurd. i The ships' task was to silence nazl coastal batteries, and clear the coast so foot soldiers could go ashore. That was accomplished with great effectiveness. Eagor Their eagerness was typified by tho difficulty tho British Scorpion had in gotting in its licks because of the zeal of tho Norwegian destroyer ' S t o r d, which had a hond in tho sinking of tho Germans' Schnrnhorst. During the coastal 'shelling, ! SUGAR STAMPS GOOD INDEFINITELY to Schilling' Coffee chilling flavor is always reliable . the Scorpion's captain messaged tho Stord, "You want any help? I'm getting bored." "First Shooting' Tho Stord replied only when it had ceased' firing, signalling, "Sorry to be so selfish, but this wns our first shooting." Among the list of British cruisers were the Scylla, the Bel fast, which took part'in the sink ing of the Scharnhorst, the Maur itius which supported the Sicily, Salerno and Anzlo beachheads, tho.Ajnx which fought tho Graf Spec, the Enterprise, the Glas gow, which sank three German destroyers in the Boy of Biscay last year, and the Orion, a veter an of the Mediterranean which helped shell Pantelleria, Sicily and Salerno. Also included In the armada were the French cruisers Mont calm and George Leygues, the British destroyer Versatile, which fired the first naval shot of this war at a U-boat, and the combat transport, the USS Bar nett, nicknamed "Barnoy-Baru," which helped make tho original landings at Guadalcanal and was among tho first transports into Naples harbor. And the British Monitor Roberts, which wore out her guns in bombarding the Ital ian coast. Mother of Foui Service Sons Gives Blood PORTLAND, June 8 (IP) Mother of four sons -in the armed services, Mrs. H. O. Mansfield,' Milton-Freewater. flew to Port land to give her second pint of mood at tne plasma center nere, blood bank officials said today She plans to give at least two more pints, ono for each of her sons. Weather Prophets Declared "Flop" LONDON, June 8 (P) John A. Moroso, Associated Press war correspondent, .reported from art invasion port today that al though "4io assault was widely hailed as the largest in history, it actually was no larger in its initial phases than the allied at tack on Sicily." Moroso witnessed both the landings in Sicily and in North Africa. "Weather prophets were ' the worst flops," he said. "Wind and a choppy channel almost caused disaster." : cd by William Garfitt of the United Fresh Fruit and Vege table association in a prepared speech. Lewis m his prepared address said that the biggest increase in meat will be in beef and pork, although there also will be more vcnl and lamb this year than in 1043. Ho asserted that about one-quarter of the country's rec ord meat production is for our armed forces and lend-lease but added that the supply still will provide more for civilians than they had, per capita, since 1935. Garfitt predicted a 150 per cent increase in the peach crop over last year, an estimated 17 per cent in the orange yield, and a five per cent hike in the grape fruit crop, tic also sam indica tions were that last years po tato production will be exceeded this year by five per cent and that the banana supply will "in all probability be increased to 50 per cent of normal before the end of 1944." '-2wi3 - ; 'In jm. M AS LOW AS a pint Sur lo b pur-YOU mokaffl In 2 mlnulii, mix LONDONDERRY, luoar and vaperatcd milk, or any cream that will whip. Whip, frees, thai i all. No cooking, no r-whipping. Smoolh, no ica crytlali. (Ui milk or iklm milk for tjallcloui frown dttrltj Mf Pkg. LONDONDERRY moki 4 plnti, any flavor. Aik yourgrocorforLONDONDERRY. If h cleat not carry It, tnd ut $1.00 for 7 . pockagti and 20 famous tcipat,ooitpaid. LONDONDERRY of the French political situation was successfully divorced from military aspects of the allied lib erations effort and the required rrencn cooperation lor this el-fort. Reporters today saw pictures taken informally at the Sunday meeting, although the light that incKies inrough tne thick forest concealing this vital post isn't Ideal for plcture-takine. The shots Indicated an air of cordial ity and the participants appeared in gooa numor. The first practical use of Jet propulsion was proposed in 1680 by Sir Isaac Newton, who mount ed a steam-operated Jet device on a four-wheeled cart. Attempted Raid On Sorong Told NEW YORK, June 8 (P) The Tokyo radio said today six B-24 heavy bombers had "attempted to raid" Sorong at the western tip of Dutch New Guinea, some 340 airline miles west of the re cent allied landings In the Schou ten islands, Tuesday afternoon. The broadcast, heard by U. S. government monitors, said a Jap anese air. unit had .intercepted the raiders, damaging one plana and repulsing the remainder. m Delicious , ,'C5' FROZEN ( Iff 1 Unit A K SSERTS.' I W I 6to8 "One! IV IS j 1 ". P il wt Own an ear to tna livelinesi of drink mixed with Canada Dry Water. "Pin-Point Carbon ation". .. millions of tinier bubbles . . . insures sparkle to the last sip, despite melting ice. Make the most of your precious liquor stocks. Use Canada Dry Water. Its special formula points up the flavor of any tall drink scotch, rye, bour- bon, or rum. - The World't Most Popular Club Soda ... Keeps Drinks livelier, longer CANADA DRY W AT E R a . Wtrtim rMtrletiecs finrft out topply Xm of botUM. PI mm cooperate -retail all TfSsg,? atapty bottles to your dal - tody! 810 BOTTLE 15' Plus deposit I ARgAglSij 1 CHURNED WITH ,,a,H I fl PASTEURIZED 1H4H SKIM MILK . - II I 1 . 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