HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAG! FOUR
rANK nXUMi MALCOLM EPLIT
"l!d!tar Manaalns Editor
A I Mi arr combination of tha Bvanlns Herald and the
enialaUi News. Published aval aiternoon except Sunder
it lanadeand Pin. itrMU. Klamath Falls. Onion, by tha
StoraS KKlehlns Co. and lim PublUhlm Company.
ft earner rrnnn f ay mail r T
OuleS Klametk taWelodoc. saklyou eounleo roar tl.00
Mi ... ,ii Moond claea mattar al tha postorflco ol Klamath
Kjo. AMt . I"?4-, ' naraaa.
March a IB79
UBSCH1PTION BATTS;
month 7 so By man
1 montha tS-SS
' Member,
Associated Press
Mambar Audit
Buraau Ctrculatloa
it lit?
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
IT'S D-DAY, and H-Hour has already passed.
The double initials emphasize this historical
moment which marks the beginning oi me enu
of the Hitler-made European
war.
Pointed up to this day were
all the months of preparation,
which assumed a scale unpre
cedented in the history of war
fare. Pointed up to this day
are the hopes of free peoples
everywhere.
Their cause was carried over
the water and through the air
to the coast of France today
Viv a vast force which included
mum men from the Midland EPLET
Empire, giving the great assault a personal
significance to you and me and intensifying
the feeling about it all here in this, their
Homeland.
Our prayers go with them on their mission
ef glory and danger.
a
Coverage
WOUR newspaper will do its best to tell the
I invasion story completely, with maps and
pictures to go along with the news.
White paper, as all readers know. Is at a prem
ium. It was our decision today to "open the
paper" for the afternoon edition, rather than
to use paper in an extra edition. An extra
necessarily results in a good deal of waste, for
many of the pages would be mere repetition
of yesterday's pages.
Therefore, we will make the coverage as
complete as our facilities permit in this edition
and those to follow in the succeeding invasion
days. We will do our best.
The War Today
By DeWITT MacJCENZIE
Associated Press War Analyst
rE voice which came over my bedside tele
phone in the early hours of this morning
was quiet, steady, confident.
"This is the DAY," it said simply. "The
Allies have attacked on the Cherbourg pen
insula and eastward. They are well inland
already."
All of us might, I think, take our cue from
the calm confidence of that voice, , as this
greatest amphibious invasion of history gets
under way. .There are many things of which
we cannot be sure at this stage, and we shall
see bitter' days, but on one score we can be
certain there is no doubt of ultimate success.
This is the coup de grace for which we have
waited so long the last great battle to exterm
inate the nazi beast. As General Eisenhower
put it to his boys when they started on this
great adventure from which many will not
reternr ':,'
"You ar about to embark on a great crusade.
The eyes of the world are upon you and the
hopes and-prayers of all liberty loving people
go with you ... We accept nothing less than '
full victory."
provide a most magnificent base for operations,
since it has the great port of Cherbourg, which
is connected with Paris by a main railway.
Once established on this peninsula, the allies
will sweep in towards the French capital and
then on through the old invasion route to
, Germany. - .
It's good to see our friend General Montgom
ery the man who beat Marshal Rommel
leading this initial thrust. Again these two
great tacticians are up against each other, for
Rommel commands the German forces of the
invanlon zone.
One of the big questions in most minds today
is how long this final phase of the European
war will last. Predictions certainly aren't in
order at this stage, but I believe that when the
Germans finally are convinced that there can
be no turn of fortune to save them, they will
quit rather than fight on their own soli. I think
that idea is worth conservative consideration.
SIDE GLANCES
rraaeeeeeaseeeseaei
Warning
A FIERCE battle is in progress, and of one
thing we should be warned: The Ger
mans nave been holding their reserves well -inland,
back of their coastal defenses in order
to be able to fling them in any direction
quickly. So our men aren't yet undergoing
the full strength of nazi attack. "
That will come later, and it's likely to be
terrific
The entire invasion coast of western Europe
is . blazing with allied aerial bombardment.
Whether this presages quick thrusts at other
points isn't yet apparent but that wouldn't be
surprising. We should watch for it.
' Meanwhile millions of enslaved people are
waiting anxiously, prayerfully, for General Eis
enhower's signal to rise and smite Hitler. The
commander-in-chief is holding them in leash
lest premature uprisings cost lives.
The allied high command has chosen as
this column has so often - predicted to. hit
western France at the tough spot,- right in the
teeth of Hitler's strongest defenses. It was the
logical thing to do, for our forces must be close
to their main base and that base is in Eng
land. So we are going at it the hard way in
the beginning, but it will be the easiest in the
long run.
a a .
Segregation Aim
THIS first allied thrust, according to the
Germans is into the fertile plain- at the,
base of the Cotentin, or Cherbourg, -peninsula.
In the midst of this is the ancient city of Caen,
about which the opening struggle swirls. It
lies close to the valley of the Seine, 149 miles
west-northwest of Paris. It's an old battle
ground, for Edward HI captured and pillaged
Caen in 1346.
If we can segregate the peninsula, it will
News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, June 6 The Netherlands
foreign minister warned, that the small
nations would not accept post-war domination
by the big four, and State
Secretary Hull replied in 800
vaporous words that all na
tions would be equal in their
"sovereignty."
This world had been wander
ing around in words, stretch
ing them, redefining them, for
a decade up to this war.
Streams of words poured from
various energetic people. We
had such things as "Technocracy."
A man wrote a book about MALLON
how we deceive ourselves with words, only he
wrote it from the standpoint of how other
' people could be deceived with words. It was
Stuart Chase, the New Deal economist, and he
dug out of obscurity a new word for his idea,
1 "Semantics."
He warned his fellow radicals against calling
such things as the taxatlon-insurance-spending
scheme of the New Deal by any right name,
and I think he originally devised- the philos
ophically false and realistically unprovable
phrase "social security," which, like most other
things, we have in name only.
I am not trying to be a philosopher, only to
tell you the difficulty confronting me in at
tempting to transfer to you the news behind
the news. Here is the Dutch minister who
says he will not take domination by greater
powers. We all know he always has.
The financial and whole economic life of his
country always depended on the greater powers,
and I mean always, because history will not
reveal an instance in which the Netherlands
controlled its own affairs without outside direct
ing influence.
Mr. Hull replied with words equally altitud
enous, and just as far -off base, saying the
"sovereignty" of Holland would be kept pure.
If these same words were piled 10,000 miles
higher, the average Intelligent man in the street
would still know the Netherlands is a small
country, Great Britain is an empire of greater
bulk and authority, that the United States is a
rich and powerful nation,, that Russia is a
rising influence which will probably dominate
Europe. The words we read in the. news.
therefore, merely deceive us from the fact that
we already know, that cannot be changed.
So also with Spain, the French committee of
liberation, the Russian - situation, or' whatever
else there is in the news of either international
or domestic consequence. .
A columnist makes a speech In New York to
the French emigres demanding that DeGaulle
be recognized as the government of France.
Is he the government of France?
Who Is DeGaulle?
HE is a politician who escaped to London,
failed at numerous belligerent enterprises.
fought the French political elements we freed
in North Africa, made a private alliance with
Russia, and then announces himself as the gov
ernment of France. Anyone can see that.
He is only a French politician who has suc
ceeded in mastering the other French politicians,
' all of them in exile and away from their
people. To recognize him as a government
would, in justice and simple common honesty,
be an act of cheating the people of France who
cannot yet express themselves.
m m
Delusion
AITH , Spain? Our people have been de
YY luded , into believing the Spanish civil
war was a cause of democracy against fascism,
and that fascism won. Anyone can see it was
a war of communism against fascism, one die
tatorship against another, neither of which we
want, all far from democracy,
In domestic politics, we also delude ourselves
with words. "Leftist" covers everything from
revolutionary communism to liberal idealism.
which are opposite. Communism means dicta
torship, ruthless direction of the individual.
while liberalism means freedom of the Individ
ual. - .; . '.-,
The only way we are going to solve any of
our difficulties is to get out of words into facts.
Pressure groups can deceive us, but only tem
porarily. . Truth is an obstinate, inevitable
leveler. It will insist' on being dominant in the
end, no matter how1 many words are heaped
upon it. ,
Thus also newspapering suffers under the
yoke of the tyranny of words, enslaved to a
dictionary rather than truth. Little men and
little minds contrive verbal artifices to deceive
themselves and their people. Sooner or later
someone in this country is going to have to look
a fact in the face. ....
tore. fw ay an enwica. we. t. h , u. a. sax wr. a
"Well, Judge, with both of your daughters Rctllng married
this month, 1 suppose you'll be able to sport a Dew pair of
. . , shoes before long!"
Funeral Plans Made
For Lt. Col. Jones
FORT DOUGLAS, Utah, June
8 (JP) Funeral arrangements
were being made today for Lt
CoL Daniel F.. Jones, director of
the ninth' service command spe
cialized training division and for
mer Oregon State college ROTC
airecior.
Col. Jones died Sunday of a
Kianey ailment, tie was 58.
commissioned a second lieuten
ant at St. Louis, Mo., in 1915, he
served In France during the first
vrona war.
Acreage of war designated
crops in 1943 was 364,000,000.
r-A Gem of Thought From Idella's i
There was a bowlar namarl firaHar
Who fell In love with a Lady Pin Setter.
He said, give me a kiss
Like a Good Littla Miss
"O.K. But if I kiss like a Bid one '
Youll sure Ukem better."
Rubber Gloves .
AT IDELLA'S
What a Qai!
25c pair
Phona sua
BLISTER CONTROL
MEDFORD, June 6 (P) A
crew of 16 and 17-year-old
youths recruited In Portland,
Seattle and other northwest
points, started work today on
Rogue river forest blister rust
control projects. The forest serv
ive will use 100 boys to fight
the white pine disease.
Friendly
Helpfulness
: To Every
Creed and Purse
Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home
r Mrs. A. A. Ward, owner
Willard Ward, U. S. Navy.
Manager
Arthur W. Larsea, :
Acting Mgr.
925 High Phone 3334
PEACE ISSUES UP
ON STOCK MARKET
By VICTOR KUBANK
NEW; YORK, June U The itock
market responded to the big Invasion
newt today with an advance) nf nttac.
rated Usuee to peaks for th year or
iwiifvr in um imuh dealing einc last
November.
There was a kuttl nervous wiling at
the opening but lt was short-lived and.
led by motor which cams out in blocks
of 1000 to 5000 shares, favorites soon
brushed off minus signs and tacked on
advances of fractions to mora than a
point. Extreme gains were reduced In
tha final hour. Transfers ran io around
1.900.000 shares com pa red with 858,000
yesieraay-
In the "new hih class war anrai
Motors. Chrysler. Packard. Wtily-Ovtr-Und.
atudabakar. Nesh-Kelvlnatar. In
ternational Telephone, Oreh&nvPalge
and Du Pont Ahead were U. ft. steel.
Bethlehem. Sears Roebuck, International
Harvester. Eastern Airlines. American
Airlines. United Air Lines, Pan Amer
ican Airway, union pacific. American
leiepnone. uooayaar, Goodrich. Home-
stake. Doma and Dow Chemical. Park
aV Tilford dropped several points. Back-
warn were scneniey. Santa re. Great
Northern, Douglas Aircraft and Eastman
ivoaax.
dosing Quotations:
American Can , ,, aoV
Am Car & Fdy .,, ,. MS
Am Tel as Tel 150',
Anaconda 25H
Calif Packing - L 27Tt
Cat Tractor . U.JM AHVt
Commonwealth, It Sou
Curtls-Wrisht .
General Electric ,
General Motors .
Gt Nor Ry pfd
Illinois Central
Int Harvester
Kennecott ,., , . ,
Lockheed , .
Long-Bell AM -
Montgomery Ward
NashKelv
N Y Central
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas .& El -
Packard Motor J
Penna R R .,.,..
Republic Steel .,, ,LI1 ,
Richfield OO : ,
Safewav Stores , .... ...
Sears Roebuck ',i ,
Southern Pacific
Standard Brands ,
Sunshine Mining
xrans-America ....
Union Oil Calif
Union Pacific ,
U 8 Steel
Warner Pictures
,-UlO
3flH
32
- 13
a- 731
301.
- 14.
- 104
a- 484
14
-a 17.
- isn
33 ' i
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- 17V4
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92
. 29 ,
. 30.
. 84
04
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-100
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PRICE LID LIFTED
WASHINGTON, June (VCeMng
prices for early 1044 potatoes were In
creased today 30 cents per hundred
Bounds for the rest- of this month,
irough an office of price administra
tion order effective in all states except
California and Arizona.
The action, under which the Increase
in growers' prices may be passed on to
the consumer, was taken to permit
growers to recoup, to some extent, losses
suffered because of bad weather con
ditions, OPA said.
The action may result In an increase
to the housewife of about one-fourth of
a cent a pound, lt was estimated.
At tha same time, and also for tha
rest of this month only, the minimum
diameter of potatoes was reduced from
one and one seven-eighths Inches to
on and one-half Inches to qualify for
the celling on V. S. No. 1 grade pota-
en
toes. This ruHns? will eliminate
6revtaus price differential between the
8. No. 1 grade and the "size B"
potatoes.
LIVESTOCK
CHICAGO. June 8 A p. WFA) Salable
hogs 31,000; total 38,000: slow, generally
steady: food and choice 380-270 lbs.
913.78, tha ton; 280-330 lbs. $11.63-13.15;
food and choice 160-170 lbs. $13.23
3.00, lighter weights scarce: good and
choice 35O-980 lbs, sows S10.69-86, choice
light weights to 811.00, approximately
30,000 hogs unsold, mostly support kind.
daiaoie came bow; saiaoie caives
1000: strictly choice fed steers and
yearlings steady; but all other weak to
39 cents lower; eastern order demand
much lest aggressive; top 917.38 paid for
several loads Including long yearling
type cattle; bulk 914.8o-17.00; heifers
mainly steady, with medium grades
dull at 934.80 down; best heifers 918.83;
cows acutely scarce, fully steady; bulls
active, firm, with weighty sausage offer
ings to 912.80, and heavy fat bulla to
913.78 and better, bulk sausage bulls
salllna at 810.50-12.00: vealers steady at
918.00 down: stock cattle scarce, bit slow.
Salable sheep 3500; total 4800: steady;
few medium 93-lb, wooted lambs 914.00,
with 88-lb. cull and common out $7.00;
two loads good and choice 78-87 lb.
shorn lambs carrying a small medium
end and with No. pelts 914.33; two loads
ahom lambs unsold; odd lots shorn na
tive ewes 97.00 down: load 80 -lb. Col
orado shearing lambs 914.00.
O
; Refrigeration
Equipment Co.
Karl Uiquhart
Sll Klamath Phona 6465
' For
Commercial
Rafrlgeratlon
SALES and SERVICE '
11
Eleven building permit were
okayed at the city council
meeting on Monday night. Most
of them were permits for the
remodeling or addition to rest
dences. ; Permits are at follows:
Mrs. Grace ' Calahan, 1403
Mitchell. Reshlngle residence.
Cost $100.
Horseshoe cafe, 1015 Main.
Construct storeroom. Cost $400.
Mrs. Fred Kohler, 349 Mar
tin. Shingle residence, construct
screen porch and build wood
shed. Cost, $130.
Robert A. McDonald. 2411
White. Add two rooms to rest
dence. Cost. $300.
Clara McCarver, 1803 Sar
gent Paint and shingle resi
dence. Cost, $423.
W. D. Cogdlll. 1840 Worden.
Build woodshed and garage.
Cost, $300.
Mrs. J. E. . H e r r e r a, 638
Owens. Repair garage. Cost,
$30.--. - -. -
Nils Dalberg, 2344 Oregon
avenue. Remodel back porch.
Cost, $03.
Archie Rem. 281 East Main.
Construct store In front of . resi
dence. Cost, $230.
J. T. Gardner, 1320 Pacific
Terrace. Build foundation for
garage. Cost, $200.
Frances Soto. 1818 want-
land. Add two rooms to resi
dence. Cost, $233.
NAVY BOMBER CRASHES
SAN DIEGO. Calif.. June 6
(yp The navy reported today
that a Liberator bomber crash
ed on Kearny mesa with ap
parently heavy loss of life. Two
buildings on the auxiliary air
field were destroyed and others
damaged. The navy said the
plane exploded and burned after
hitting the ground.
CHICAOO. Juna S bnTha ar.ln mar.
kat and.d its IndacUlon on tha In
vailon newa near tha cloca today. Final
trading pushed soma wheat prices up
as much as a cents, while soma rye
controcts scored fains of SV. cants.
Tha wheat market displayed a stronc
ma lata In tha tradlna. aatterrf buv.
Ins round only small otrtrlngs. A
nervous rye market also was atronser.
with some traders uncertain aa to how
tha opening of a western front would
affect demand. Oats moved upward
with wheat on light offerings.
Wheat closed IV. to 2 cenla higher
than yesterday's finish July Sl.sj-li.
Oats ware Ho to l".o higher. July 79Sc.
RH 1mu .a 4, A. hl ...I..
0"V.. a Barley was. V,o to ko higher,
Potatoes
wmwtuv, v inr.wrrii-rota-
toes, arrivals 111; on track 349; total
U. . shipments 997. supplies moderate;
for California Lone WhiLu. hoar .t.w
demand moderate, market steady: for
off conditioned stock demand stow, mar
ket dull: for Southern Trlumnh riaSmanai
slow, market slightly weaker; California
ana Bliss Triumphs U. I. No. 1, 93.7a-
Tolling
The Editor
Letl.rs primed Hera must net ka mete
than MO wards In lenslh, mual as wtll
t.n legiolr an ONI 1101 al the paper
Ml,,?rl must be suna. Bentrleuilena
raliewlns these rules, are waimlj wal-
CRITICISM or POLITICAL
PARTIE8
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., To
tha Editor) What is wrong with
our political parties? Not sup
porting or belonging to any of
Uicrn, perhaps you think I have
no right to say what I think.
Nowover, since they concern
themselves with what effects me,
I think I have and out of train
ing, hnbit, Inclination, belief,
passion, wishes, etc., I am going
to say It, If to no one but the
Jailer when ho poke food
through the bars at me.
Modern production Is revolu
tionary, lt constantly changes
the method of producing evory
article, lt constantly changes
the article ltsrir. it constantly
aanrchna bv technolouical Im
provement, new chemical proc
esses, etc., lor ootn n nuiurvm
article, the uso of different mate
rials, and different processus. It
Is the first mode of production
In the several diriereiu anct ais
tlnrt modes of Droductlon devel
oped during man's pnst history
that was revolutionary.
Our political parties were
ninlnlv organized around the out
look of previous modes of pro
duction mat tentioa to viow
everything as final; that were
governed by habit, precedent,
and tradition, incy nave oo
come dominated by profession
als. who mainly havo tho law
yers background, and who tend
to view things through the nar
rowness of legal procedure.
The lawyers would be under
stood better wero they termed
"legatUors" Instead of "lawyers."
Law, properly speaking, rests
upon what actually Is. . . . things
and their actions and the forces
governing that action. Modern
social outlook accepts tha people
as the "Law Givers" in temporal
affairs and "the intent of the law
giver Is the law." Quotation
marks Include words used by
Lincoln in his first Inaugural ad
dress. His famous "of, for, and
by the people" remarks at Gettys
burg and "We the people" in the
prcamblo of the Constitution of
the United States of America
supports the rest of my conten
tion lust previously stated. Our
so-called lawyers take decrees,
precedent, etc.. In short, all they
can una to esumisn legality as
the law. The result Is that all
political parties became ossified
They constantly work against the
change that the revolutionary
mode of production now existing
makes necessary. Even when
they institute change, It Is simply
an attempt to go back to tho
ways of an earllor and more out
dated legality.
Their appeal Is to common
sense. The Ideas most held In
common about things by those
not. constantly checking and In
vestigating the thing and Its
changes aro the ones doveloned
the furtherest back In history
and handed down by tradition
and fixed habit. But the very
technical processes of production
forces Investigation, by modern
scientific methods, of all things
including not only ideas them
selves but the methods of think
ing and Investigation whoreby
all Ideas developed. It thereby
causes things to be done by other
methods than those that appeal
greatest to the Ideas still most
generally held in common. It
forces a change from what is
wanted by those who are held by
the mothod of appealing to com
mon sense for justification of
every proposed action.
Every day the forces of
change created by modern indus
try become greater. Every day
they strike with increased force
and vigor at every organization
that attempts to bring things to
a. static condition. Tho first ten
dency of all those who are gov
erned by traditionally accented
Ideas, that they never investigat
ed closely, is to strengthen the
mental fences, the 'Inhibitions,
that prevent observance and rec
ognition of actions' that occur
outside the narrow circle of tbose
limited pre -conceived beliefs.
Every Idea not totally Included
in the main principles they have
accepted as premises from which
all their conclusions are drawn
is, to them, destructive, it is
heresy, unpatriotic, inhuman. Im
moral, and everything bad and
as such, something to be destroy
ea, . incy oecome me ones who
have strong urges to destroy, to
rend, to tear apart. Yes, you
guessed lt to burn books above
everything else, because books
Demonstrotss Connino
I" ili
i -t . i f -K
f i t -v
. Ml
v. .. .
Mrs. Vivian rreeman, Portland canning specialist Ulan I
ilh Falls this week eonduetlng a canning ichool oa'tha siSSl
lha Pelican theatre. lleml
the Pelican theatre.
Annroxlmntolv 100 women
gathered in the Pelican theatre
Tuesday morning to hoar Mrs.
Vivian Freeman, Portland can
ning specialist, give the Initial
Instruction course of the four
day canning school which la be
ing sponsored for Klamath coun
ty homamekers by the Klamath
County Nutrition council. Mrs.
Harold Teale ansirted Mrs. Free
man on the stage.
Mrs. Freeman's program for
tha remainder of tha week, dur
ing which she will conduct can
ning classes each morning from
6:30 a. m. until 11:30, is as follows:
Wednesday: demonstration of
canning methods and processing
for peas, cherries, ana chicken.
Thursday: the canning of meat
of different kinds, and a demon
stration of tho preservation of
one fruit and one vegetable.
Friday: Mrs. Freeman will do
request demonstrations of foods
that local homemakers have
found difficult to can, and will
give Information on pickling,
making relishes, and Jams. Wo
men who have requests for the
Friday program should take
them to the office of the home
demonstration agent as soon as
posslblo. The offlco Is at 206
Federal building, where Mrs.
Freeman is making nor official
headquarters.
Mrs. C. L. Harvey, Keno road,
was awarded a jrlze fo 23
pounds of cake flour as the
homemakcr who had come the
greatest distance for tho school.
Other prizes of one pound pack
ages of coffee and canning Jars
were also given.
are the most permanent recentl-
cal of the Ideas that they have
developed a fear of.
Political parties are a neces
sity under the system wa live in.
But principles are the Important
thing in governments of every
kind. It is not individual men
or parties that should form your
starting point of Investigation
ana oy wnat you are governed
but principle. First you must set
yourself to learn the right or
wrong of principle The slatlc
principle that dominates our pre
sent political parties Is wrong In
the modern world of change. At
least I am fully convinced of this
and upon It I baa my action of
not supporting them. Can you
show me where I am mistaken?
Thank you.
O. O. WOMACK, IWA-CIO,
234 Main St.
KG
IPE1
DFPARKR
Crater Luke park wortm
now have the rosd (torn' Oat
Creek to Annie Springs putj
ly opened, It was snnauacedi,
day by Thomas C. Pirker.a
slatant superintendent Tin raj
Is not officially open urttd
there are still logs to loiek
traffic.
Men from Medford will btra
Wednesday to clear lop he
the roud and mow plow opm
tors will begin at . the aa
time to clear more mow drifts.
Parkor said that It li bp!
that tho road through the part
from Fort Klamath to Km
Creek via Annie Sprlnw twK,1
bo open for travel by the latte?
part of the week.
As soon ai that road li cpa
filowlng will begin on tin mi
o park headquarters, and lite
this Is eleored work will bqia
on clearing the headquirtin
area, Porker said. '- ..
TWO DIE
POCATELLO. Ida, Jim I
W Flight Officer! WlllUm T.
Fischer of 400 Jefferson iW
Corvallls, Ore, and Frank l
Buzzanca of Chicago were MM
when an army plane piled J
on tho Pocotello air Urn r
way last muni.
General
Paints
WallpaP'
S18 Mala U
phona S'
Allan Adding Machines
Frlden Calculators
Oeiks - Chain Filti
PIONEER PRINTING
AND STATIONERY CO.
124 So. th Klamath Palls
MR WITH VVATER-D1Y IN 1 H0D1U
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OWB SAlsVOll DOSS TWaV AVststAsHi ROOM
SPEED-EASY
WALL FINISH
80 easy to use Just thin with watsn
One cost It usually enough area
oer wallpaper. You coo dm the
irom almost immadf
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935
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Ooodfor Juna 90. Ona to a Famllr
LtoUS.Du5o;i;! "Cavalcade ef America"
KPO and KFI Mondays at 8:30 p. m.
815 Market
F. R. HAUGER
Open All Day Saturday
Phona 7221
III
Is the Problem of
Synthetic Rubber
On Trucks
and other
Heavy Equipment
Troubling You?
Then You'll Want to Attond ths
Meeting
Thursday -7 P. M.
j At the Willard Hotel
Dr. James H. Hedrich
ODT Tire Specialist
Will Speak!