Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 26, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE . FOUR
FRANK JINKmt MALCOLM EPLKY
Editor Manaslng Editor
Stoma niDinin m -
SUBSCRIPTION RATES!
.0 months 83.29
E. Mr-j-- month Too By mm o nwnim J.?
' S5 ' " ana By mill vr W.oo
oid?WlrHrrf?Modo. Siskiyou coun'lca J... n.OQ
Member,
AMocUted Prast
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
an.
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
JAPANESE -AMERICAN hunger strikers at
the Tulelake segregation center apparently
did a Pretty good ioh nSJSSS
Isolated in me swtMi .........
than promoting their release.
By resorting to a bizarre
pressure effort, they put the
. VVtlA on uis -" - -
when, we understand, release pfeX
of all or most oi me vruume
makers on probation was un
der serious consideration.
WRA will not yield to such
pressure, of course, and the
men remain in the stockade or
,. 4 Via KAnto,. Vincnital.
If the Japanese stockade oc- EPLEY
eupants really want out, they cooked their
own goose. If they want to make martyrs
of themselves, that is something else.
At the time of a previous hunger strike,
there were evidences that some of the stockade
occupants were chiseling with secret caches of
food and vitamin pills. A little of that, once
discovered by others who are starving them
selves for "the cause," raises ned with a
hunger strike.
e e
The Two Second Districts
THE congressman of the second district of
California, Clair Engle, paid Klamath
county a quick visit today en route to the
Tule lake and Alturas countries. The state line
between this Oregon area, and a part of Engle's
district, has little significance except as a nuis
ance. Engle's district, he believes, is the biggest
In the United States. It runs south to Death
Valley, west almost to the coast, and east to
the Nevada line.
Running it a close second in size is the
Oregon second district, which adjoins it on the
north.
Engle gets quite a kick out of his relations,
as a neighbor congressman, with Lowell Stock
man of the Oregon second district. Engle is
of small stature, while Stockman, as every
body knows, towers about 6 feet 6 and weighs
tome 280 pounds.
"If Stockman will run interference for me,
I'll carry the ball any time," says Engle.
I, Engle is running for re-election as the demo
cratic nominee. His district is not exactly
New Dealish in prevailing sentiment, and ap
parently he stays off the New Deal bandwagon,
despite his democratic affiliation.
News Behind ihe News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, July 26 These reports out
of Sweden and Switzerland on the Ger.
man revolution are always open to suspicions
or exaggeration.
The Germans long have had
their rumor agents well
planted. True also Hitler may
well have decided to make a
virtue out of the purge. Dic
tators have done that before.
But you need go no farther
than the Russia front to know
the end is nigh. His military
situation has become indefen
sible in any substantial or dur-
aoie manner. The end should
MALLON be a matter of a few weeks,
or at the most months.
Perhaps the best indication of the actual con-
IK)
dttion is a letter the Russians captured from
the pocket of the nazi tank General Hoffmeister.
It sounded like what a 'German tank general
might well say and is considered authentic.
Hoffmeister related how he had been called
all the way back, to Berlin from the fighting
front last May to hear a speech by der fuehrer
to assembled eastern generals.
Desperate Conditions
HITLER talked along in an easy way saying
he and national socialism had been in
desperate conditions before, that he had always
surmounted these trying times, and he suggested
with polite but unmistakable innuendo that
they read the history of national socialism and
study Its nazi application.
The younger generals showed some enthus
iasm for this line of talk, but the older generals
asked where they would get the soldiers, planes
and tanks to defend these words.
Hoffmeister complained of contrary orders
later received, first to withdraw, then to hold,
and of the lack of reinforcements which fin
ally caused his tank group to be annihilated.
These same older generals are the ones who
led the revolt. Since the middle of June the
Russian advance has been little more than a
march. Put no trust in the planted Swiss
reports that none of the revolutionary or dis
senting generals were on mat eastern irom.
e
Resentment Evident
BY far the greatest resentment against Hitler
has been evident on that line since Stalin
grad. At no point yet have they been able to
defend a line, although one was promised (a
stout one, the Germans said) running from Riga
to Odessa.
Odessa has long since gone and Riga is out
flanked, and probably surrounded. The nazis
just do not have the men and materials for a
real fighting effort and the generals know it
best.
It is possible now that the. reds will run into
some strong defensive points around Warsaw,
but no other defense line into Germany looks
. like anything important. ' Talk of a Vistula
river line is as circuitous as the river' itself
which may offer a natural defense, due to its
width in the south, .but the Russians are known
to have made great concentrations centering on
that southern front,' particularly in the Lwow
area.
- What we must look for next is a pause in the
Russian marching to bring up ' communications
lines. That they have gone as far and as fast
as they have without stopping for this necessity
is truly remarkable.
'.
Trapped Men Removed
BUT the pause is apt to be governed by a
switch in Russia emphasis to the Lwow
area. (The nazis probably, have removed most
of their 300,000 men reported trapped in the
Baltic states by this time.) "
In Normandy the same nazi weakness is evi
dent. The slow fighting there lately has merely
represented our upbuilding of strength for the
. push ahead.
While the nazis have 60 divisions in France
and the lowlands, they have been able to pre
sent us with only 24 on the Normandy line,
and obviously are in a situation where they
cannot build up much, else they would have, in
view ot the time allowed. . ,
Only in Italy can they hope to hold out for
long. There, they are retiring upon a moun'
tainous short line (Gothic) upon which they
once had 20,000 Italian laborers at work pre
paring positions, and in all, spent at least six
months building positions which could be de
fended by a weak force. ' -
The Po river line behind that one is indefen
sible considering the size of their force-
Thus it is the young German officers who
are as much responsible for the continuation of
this war as is Hitler. They are the ones who
answer a question which has long been in my
mind as to how in the world he could possibly
maintain himself in the face of his situation.
But they cannot long continue fanatically
oduvious to the decisions in which so many of
meir wiser emers iosi ineir lives.
, HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
SIDE GLANCES
Survey of Facilities,
Materials Along Alaska
Highway to Be Started
EDMONTON Alfa T1 OB
fCP) Col. F. S. Strong, com
manding officer northwest serv.
ice command, announced today
that Canadian and American of-
ncers will Begin Monday a sur
vey of all facilities and mater
ials the United States govern
ment no longer has use for
along the Alaska highway and
these will be turned over to the
Canadian government.
Col. Strong said in an inter
view that "we have nothing to
. hide" concerning reports of
equipment waste on the high
way. "Criticism of waste is not
unfounded from the viewpoint
. of uninformed persons."
He said it had taken a little
time to get approval of a means
of handing over equipment to
, the Canadian government, "but
we had it worked out before
this unfavorable publicity hit
. . us." ,
. ' Col. Strong conceded some
mistakes may have been made.
''It can be that some officers
have not always used the best
Judgment, but they should not
be criticized for derelection of
duty. We are all guilty of it in
time."
' Probably a lot of equipment
! has been sent back to the Unit
ed States which never will be
' used," he said. "There will be
yards all over the United States
filled with stuff that : will be
useless.
"That leaves a lot of proper
ty that something has to be
I l m,. ....
uune duuui. ne omcers in-
SnPrtlnC the omtinman. vnn..
' "-o , uiajr wi
der it destroyed because it is
damapprf cnnilor? i-.c-Q.Un.
incomplete or not' economically
cpouduic or vransporiaDie. it
had no realizable value to the
u. o. army. .
Hp arlriori that 'nnu.
eriV. Whirh hae an anrniAmUt
value, is sent back to the Unit-
eu oiie5. inousanas and thou
sands and thousands of tons of
it i flnmina ka-l. Tl
wicen, waterways and wnite
nurse an me time.
.. . ".luu wi equip
ment, such as mattresses, enam-
ci wear ana sioves. - mat set
tler thinks the equipment is
Okeh and that, hn ran ttc It L...1
perhaps the medical officer has
vvjiucimieu u as unsanitary.
WORKERS NEEDED
ASTORIA, July 26 As-
... ..... iivi-vi muiv; man -1UU
workers for impending road jobs,
dock construction, ship repair
...in uujisuueijon oi me navy
hospital, city officials said to
day, . ,
Classified ads get results.
-A Gem of Thought From IdellaV
There was a cute Jitil. OPA Wren
Who said "We're gonna need a lotta help when
FDR's Boss Ration man
, ; Finish his plan
For simplified Fprm eighj hundrsd and Un.'i
Stationery at Idella's
AT ID ELLA'S
. Phon MM
I 8.
FULL CUSSES OPEN
ATSE6RE6EE CAMP
TULELAKE Fall semester
classes ior iri-siaie scnools began
in the Japanese segregation
center this week with over 1600
stnrlpnt.c cinrnllcil in tu
high and the senior high schools,
attuiuijig ,io vi. f. uunaerson,
high school principal. The en
rollment exceeded last year's
total of 1546 and additional stu
dents are still expected to register.
the first week in July registered
i iu uuys una gins. .v
Two more Japanese speaking
schools have been authorized and
are holding classes. No WRA
funds are available for these,
WRA officials announce, all ex
penses being met by parents of
the students who attend.
At Belvoir, Va., the army's
models of airports, factories and
battleshins are ctiirHoH tn
the effects of various paints and
designs for concealment of
ground objects from aerial observers.
-o.. " IBllbllCfO in
Cirettnn whn hair. MaH .1
' .. ' c acn me le
SUlts of seed planting by air
plane, are of the enthusiastic
opinion that better grass crops
are obtained than pan ha
dUCBd bv the nlri iViethnrl nt hj
seeding.
WORKERS! WHO SUFFER
FACTORY' ITCH
SKIURASIIES
tmt Promptly rtHwts tertaral
First ppllcHonB of wondwful footblor.
medicated (ft id Zmo Poctor'a for
aula promptly rellv iDtoua Iteb
and burning of ilmpU Ma runeo, oe
una ind imllsr oklo n4 scalp trrita
tiosa due to external cause. Zemo alto
aids healing. Backed by 85 years' auc
cms! Clean, atainlesa, invisible Zemo
won't show on Wn. mm mm aa aa oak.
""""Bt,".ZErio
cW.ttfrivlWMayW.itB. T,KiHtt.u.,MT, off.' y-u
"Okay, I'll compromise we'll go bock home and wait
till Ihe war's over before we run ewavl I guess things
....j -.r,-0iv where we'd eat tonight!"
Market
Quotations
NEW YORK. July 26 (API Stock! ad
vanced generally In the early stage of
today's market but buyers became chary
on the rise and many ot the gains later
disappeared.
Closing quotaUons:
American Can , 92tfc
Am Car St Fdy .
Am Tel tc Tel
Anaconda ....
Call! Packing
Cat Tractor .
Commonwealth tc Sou
Curtis-Wright
General Electric
General Motors
Gt Nor Ry fd
Illinois central
Int Harvester
Kennecott
Lockheed
Long-Bell "A"
Montgomery warn
rtaan-Aeiv .
N Y Central
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas & El
Packard .Motor : .
Penna R R .
Republic Steel
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores
Sears Roebuck
Southern Pacific ..
Standard Brands
Sunshine Mining
Trans-America
Union OH Calif
Union PacUlc
U S Steel
Warner Pictures
.. 38i
- 2(1' ',
28 1 j
..
- Ill
. 3i
- 37H
. 62'.
. 3SVi
17s
"'i
31,
17'.
. 10'i
. 4"i
. 1SH
. 30',
lets
32H
Si
29i
10i
- saw
. s,
- 301'
. 31 i
. JO
. 0
. 19t.
-jonn
- ss.
Potatoes
3S0 lbs. tows H3.M-U 00; Rood and
choice hogs under 170 lbs. scarce.
Salable caiUe 11,000; salable calves
800: strictly good and choice fed steers
and yearlings active, firm; lop 117.75.
paid for four loads, some held higher;
996 lb. yen rl lugs $17.50; common and
medium grassy and short fed steers
weak to 25 cents lower, very slow even
low-good grade offerings at $15.7Jf down;
most grassera $11.50-14.00; fed hftfers
weak to 25 cents lower top $17.35;
mixed offerings 517.40; most heifers
13.50-16. 23; beef cows firm but canners
and cutter weak to 15 cents lower: bulls
Senerally steady; vcalerr firm at f 15.00
own; most grassy sausage Bulls W.50
10.50, with heavy dairy breeds up to
J12.00 and better; stock cattle fully
steady and demand broader for weighty
fleshy feeders.
Salable sheep 1500; total 5500; market
moderately active, early sales mostly
steady; two doubles mostly common
Texas springers $10.00; good and choice
native springers $14.00-14,50 tth bucks
discounted $1.00, medium and good
$13.00-13.75, common $9.50-11.50. light
culls down to $7.00; shorn native ewes
$4.00-5.25 according to grade.
WHEAT
CHICAGO. July 26 (AP-WTA) Pota
toes, arrivals 42: on track 69: total U. S.
shipment 566t supplies 'light; demand
exceeding available supply; market firm
ccuins- taano buss inumpm u. ,
No. 1. $3.88-91: Washington Bliss Tri
umphs U. S. No. 1. $4.60: Nebraska
Red Warbas U. S. No. 1. 13.79 Mis
ouri Cobblers generally good quality
faS.ll.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. July 26
(AP-WF A) Cattle: salable 275. Steady:
two loads medium to good 1050-1100
lb. Oregon grass steers $14.50. medium
900-1000 lb. to feed-lot $11.00-12.00.
urass neifers absent. Good 1100-1200 lb.
grass cows $12.00-12.50. one load medium
$10.00 with three out at $9.00, cutters
and canners 25 cents lower, few package,
cuncrs 40.1-0-.M, canners s. 79-0,70.
Weighty sausage bulls $9.50-10.00. can-
ner and common $7.00-8.00. Calvaa 70.
Dicaay; cnoica veaiers 3l4.oo-i4.30.
Hogs: salable 876. Steady; aood to
choice 180-230 lb. barrows and gilts
?ii.f9, sows o cents lower good to
. Sbeap: saiabla 3250. Steady to weak;
three -decks full-wooled food- to choice
80-S3 lb. north coast lambs asking $13.50
14.00, two decks medium to good No. 1
pelt 76-78 lb. Oregon moved $11.00;
sorted 15 per cent at $10.00, common
to medium No. 2 pelts $8.00-9.00. Good
to choice yearlings No, 2 pelts quoted
TIUW41W, mraiuni to gooa o.QU'B.w,
Shorn ewes about steady.
alable and total cattle 300; holdover
40: salable and total calves
v", mamd very now; particularly on
common light steers and heifers and on
nee Incomplete; few common steers
Z mX j,' . . rimers ito.w-9-50;
medium heifers to $10.75; canner-
flitti- mws tl nn.s in, -1 .
- uv-u.uv, ioi uairy type
cows up to $6.00; common-medium beef
common-medlum bulls $7.00-8.50; faw
V""" gooacnoice veaiers
$13.60-14.50.
earn Die and total hogn 750; market
r, 't" ids. cents
higher at $16.00; few down to $11.75;
250-270 lbs. Ktefldy. largely $13.75-14.00;
Wt lights $12.50-13.00; good sows $9.25-10-00:
light welghU to $10.60; good feed
er pigs $12.00; choice quotable to $12.75
Salable and total sheep 800; market
!??9: medium-good grades slow t
io 50-11.00; common grades $8.00-50;
1 t " a.w, yeanings h.oo-hj.oo;
Km" W'W-78; common awes down
rUTPlflA I., ne a,. -.,1 m . ..
active after active opening but com-
n lotas nlaanaia.. ., 'j..
choice 170-240 lbs. $J4.76 and weights
over 240 lbs. $14.00; sows around 25
ranter hlarhea he, ia. a
lowing this advance; good and choice 300-
0
When you're feeling tow btc$ut$)
your stomach ji acting up. get beck
o the be)m with toothing Pftpro
l$MOL.It help bring prompt relief
worn the dittref $ of tour, siekiih up
set tomach-acts to retard gee for
metion and eimple diarrhea. 1kU
good and does good. When your
etomach is upset, take soothing
PEPTO-bismol.
. A nonwtcH pttopver
CHICAGO. July 26 fAPt-Pye futures
lost more than a cent today and oats
were weak but the wheat market re
sisted the down trend, supported by
purchases for commercial Interests and
the unwillingness of traders to press the
selling side while price ere so near the
loan level.
Mill buylnf of wheat futures, trade
sources said, reflected large flour sales
to baking Interests. Hedge selling was
relatively light. Indicating that farmers
are withholding much of the new crop
wheat from market. The volume of
trade was small.
At the close wheat was unchanged
to Ytc lower than yesterday's close,
September $1.S5. Oat were off U to
fee, September 711-ic. Rye was IV
to I'ViC lower, September il.Ofl"-!.
Barley- was oil,.. to lc, September
$1.31 li.
Cascade
Mr. and Mrs. Harry McGuire
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Howell
of San Jose are occupying a cab
in at Summit Lodge this week.
The McGuires are former Bend
residents.
Mrs..Bennie Benson is assist
ing at the Southern Pacific
cookcar for a few days.
F. C. Perkeypile of Corvallis
is occupying his cabin on the
lake.
Dr. and Mrs. Albert Davis' of
San Francisco arc here for a
month's vacation. They have a
summer home on the north shore
01 bake Udell. Dr. Davis is a
plastic surgeon and after the
SOUTH
PS
BATTERED BY
li
UN GUNS
v. wni.XND NOHGAAHD
ROME, July 26 -7 Th"
southern portion of tho historic
city of Pisa was buttered today
as 'big Gorman suns stepped up
their shelling oi me arena u.
low tho Arao rlvor which are In
American hands.
While the eighth army, nd-30-mlli-
front,
had penelnitud to a point with
in eight miles of the outskirts
of Florence, the nun army, annr
of whoso units aro within a few
hundred yards of the Pisa's fa
mous leaning tower, consoli
dated Its hold on a brond front
south of tho Arno.
.Tho heavy German shelling of
the American held portion of
Pisa south of the Arno covered
likely river crossings In and
near the city with mortar fire.
An allied communlquo sold
eighth army units had reached
the outskirts of San Cascluno,
eight miles south of Florence,
and In other sectors of the In
land front gains up to three
miles had been scored. Strong
enemy defenses northeast of
Areizo were pierced and Com
priano was captured.
In widespread nerlnl activity
yesterday, which Included an at
tack on the' Hermann Gocrlng
works southwest of Llnz, Aus
tria, and on railway nnd com
munication lines In northern
Italy and Yugoslavia, planes of
the Mediterranean allied air
force made 1700 sorties.
During the varied operations,
tho communique said, 65 Ger
man aircraft were destroyed
while 2 Sallied planes were re
ported missing.
Reconnaissance photographs
showed that the tank works of
the Gocring plant, turning out
heavy tanks and armored cars,
"was virtually destroyed" by tho
bombardment from upwards of
500 fighter-escorted Liberators,
headquarters announced.
An official source quoted a
German prisoner, explaining the
stubborn resistance to the eighth
army advance, as saying he nnd
his comrades had been told "the
British were so furious at the ef
fect of flying bombs on England
that they would shoot any cap
tured German Immediately."
of the soldiers and sailors burned
and disfigured there were his pa
tients. He praises the courage of
the soldiers and sailors.
Mrs. Alfred Eamoa and ehll.
dren of Portland are spending a
month in Mrs. Eamcs parents'
cabin on the north shore of
Lake Odell. Mrs. Eames Is the
former Tony Lucas, daughter of
Judge and Mrs. Lucas. The Lu
cas have not been coming to the
lakj for several years, due to the
judge hnvliiK had an accident.
falling down the stairs, which I
crippled mm. Judge Lucas was ! B
the chief counsel for h Pnrirul
Greyhound Stages before his accident.
Tokyo Radio Says
Task Force Hits
SBasask. m
At Palau Isla
n Tha Associated Praas
Tho Tokyo radio snld today
that a U. S. task force, consist-
lni I'hlrflv of nircrart carriers,
had pcnctrulcd to tho vicinity
of Pulmi Islimd, about 500 miles
rn.st of Mindanao In tho rump
pines, and that about HO carrier-bused
planes hnd nttacked
that Island.
"Our ground units opened up
nn antiaircraft bumigu mid
shot down two of the enemy
philips, " said the brnmlrnst,
which was recorded by tho As
sociated Press.
Tokyo also reported that
American planes hnd raided
Service Men
and Women
Home on Leave
S 1e Adra Qetllar from Snn
Diego, Calif. Hero until August
2.
BK 1e Nan Goellar from
Treasure Islnnd, Calif. Hero
until August S.
S l'c Dorothy Mae Polmroy
from Sun Diego. Calif. Hero
until August 1.
Y 3c June McMullon from
Clearfield, Utah. Hero until Au
gust 3.
Sgt. Rolland King of tho army
air corps. Here until July 31.
8 2c Robart C. Harrington
from Sun Diego, Calif. Here
until July 31.
Bat. Bteohtn Oiun trom
Camp Breckinridge, Ky. Here
until July 27.
Edward B. L.onsflra irom
Kings Point, N. Y. Hero until
August 5.
Pvt. Mark oralta irom ami
Diego. Calif. Here until July
30.
The above service people nre
entitled to free passes to the
local theatres and free fountain
service at Lost River dairy by
the courtesy of Lloyd Lamb oi
the theatres and R. C. Woodruff
of the dairy. Please call at The
Herald and Nows office (ask far
Scott Reed) for your courtesy
tickets.
For tho first time In five long
years, the hope exists that the
end of the war Is In sight. It will
be delayed oly if any of us nt
nom! worKors. employer, fnrm-
er and public servant slackens
the pace. Eric A. Johnston,
president U. S. C. of C.
Due to a cessation nf luinimrr
many species of wildlife actually
increase in war zones.
FOR ITCHING OF
MINOR SKIN RASHES
get this medicated powder. Contoini in
gredients oi ten recommended by many
pecialiat ior simple raahet, diaper raah
and chafing Meiaant soothes and forms
ana nt nnistla a mr,Am .1,1-
bombing of Pearl Harbor, many Costa little, .Always demand Mutaua,
VACATION TIME
can bring
ACCIDENTS!
It's smart to be
protected
As tt ii i it
claimed that dun!, M
American ennn,,," , SJ
uii on rnlnii, '
Tho German n,..
PNB, In n h,",,&
London, quoted Vf
radio as ,yini! .., ft
"K iiiuiinpis w,.r
"".v on P...J
by the enemy i, , ' '"'M
ine first U. a nii.-V
ar on Pl, V.,.h
I
I
BKPRKSENTINO TUR I
I MUTUAL BENEFIT
Health and Accident I
Lmsi n. or umano
iu H.Uh tym Itn
"Irons D...i... nlldi
Inst March an . M
,i i.- . . " IflStaH ..1
. uhiiiiiki'ci nut i4
part of the MS
but not o, a ?
was evon damaged "
Palau Is hMdqurttri
entire Japanese South .?
ernment nnd I. no"
u,lni!i!-ae aingnpnr whul
R'l. why It .mui-
O if t h T Phil In', J . . -5 .Fe
......... ,,,u i.Miuiti, proviit,-
powerful flret C
uiilMinrse. ii i, Hlriiteglc inJ
till) uronn II... "..?
southwest of Gunm, whte
miles northwest of HoifJ
Dig allied tjuse on New rJ
and nn equal clisUnct"
Dutch Kn.it Indies Islands C
the Philippines. ,
After the crippling bin
Palau Mnrch 211. n un
until Gen MiicArthur'i fe
west Pnclflc bombers ,Z
near there May 13. "
...,,u w, ,,, oninend
Inr cnlllnk' ll.st at Ky,,JZ
clflc rnlders. nlrdromw td
til nelnnlnn I s .
Tho AtUickn trndfd fai
trnllzn any Jjiniinpv ii.Jj
to Intorfore with Mm, cfl
Nimltz Invnsinnn o( Si J
rillnm nnrl Ti..i.
....... iiini iiiillll.
To a respontibli
man with 2 or 3
children
It's no fun bcliic t btttm
ner unless you've got 1 4
job. niRlil now, Suuthtn n
clflc has a spccinl opcniy
Brakcmnn for tho rijht tq
You need to be steady mis)
liable because this Is t IN
sibla job. The work ll to
vital and iiitcrcstlnt. h
Brakoman you work on tnJ
help operate them, help bj
war materials moving, icni
around, meet people ana I
sood mnnev doiim it. Ate
counla of weeks or so Ol W
Ing, you'll moko ovtr q
monthly at bow piy. M
Drnkemen make coiiiWW
more.) This is an ImportinlS
with a permanent compefj
even thoiiRh it takes no on
ence to start.
See or write Troinmoittt,
P. Station, Klamath Folb,i
your nearest S. P. Ajt
Have a Coca-Cola Viva!
(YEAH MAN I)
.or being the good neighbor in Brazil
Your American' good-natured invitation Havi a "Coke" is a good-neighbor
policy in tbrea ihort words; It marks that brand of friendliness which our
fighting men carry with them everywhere among our Allies. In many lands
from Alaska to South, Africa, Coca-Cola Is spreading the custom of thi pause
that rejreshes,-tht refreshing moment devoted to just beipg friendly. Enjoy
it at home, too, with frosty Coca-Cola from your own refrigerator
lomiD unph Avrxoiirv or thi cecA.eon
COCA. Cfti A BftTTI -Min . ....
885 Spring St wrnrw' w KLAMTH LLS
to acquire frUmdly
dons. That's why V
C.i.U called "CoV'.
.tM4tbti