PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON November 24 LEND-LEASE TO El (Continued from Pase One) . corn. statistic. TlllS SllOWCC) that the United Kingdom had supplied, up to June 3U 01 mis voar, munitions and other goods and services valued at $2,437. 062,000 and that Australia. New Zealand and India furnished $911,065,000 a grand total of $3,348,127,000. No Comparison The United Stales has furnish, ed to the United Kingdom for the same period ending June 30, a total of $9,321,549,000 of lend lease and to all the allies a total of $28,27O.3M,000 worth, But Mr. Roosevelt urged that no comparisons be made on a dollar basis. "We are not loaning money under lend-lease," he said- "We art not. receiving payment un der reverse lend-lease. . , . "Neither the monetary totals of the lend-lease aid wo suffply, nor the totals of the reverse lend-lease aid we receive are measures of the aid we have given or received In this war. That could be measured only in terms of the total contributions toward winning victory of each of the United Nations. Over only three American buildings does the flag fly of ficially night and day over the capitol and the adjacent house of representatives and senate office buildings. Phone Operators End Walk Outs WASHINGTON. Nov. 24 M The nation breathed relievcdly Into Its telephones today, spar ed of a threatened widespread strike that could have tied up its communications in wartime. Telephone operators who had quit their jobs in 29 Ohio cities, Washington and Detroit went back to their switchboards. Sim ilar walkouts which had shown every sign of developing in New York and elsewhere promptly faded. Phillips Pleas For 'Closed Mind' On Fundamental Ideals A plea for a "closed mind." on the fundamental ideas and ideals upon which our country was founded, to guide us through these troubled times, was the Thanksgiving message of the Rev. Victor Phillips, Rotary speaker at Friday's club lunch eon at the Willard hotel. Such fundamentals as belief in God and the brotherhood of man should be our unquestioned be liefs, Rev. Phillips said. Regard ing such principles, he likened thn "ooen mind" to an open drain which catches all the rub bish carried on the current. He closed his talK w 1 1 n a charge of "hats off to the past and coats off to the future." It was announced that John B. Reilly of Whittier, Calif., direc tor of Rotary International, would visit and address the club next Friday. OREGON WOOLEN STORE SUITS With Distinction Finest, oil-wool fabrics, " " smartly styled 3250 sir TOPCOATS Handsomely tailored . all-wool fabrics . for nippy weather , ;24 50 to $ 45 op ' HATS Genuine fur and wool felts, . distinctively styled $!295 3o Sheeplined Slippers Tot chilly mornings and i ' evenings $2.95 Heavy Unionsuits 25 Wool 50 Wool Wool Shirts Plain or pattern styles in wool and part-wool $5.95 to $9.85 Flannel Pajamas Slip-on or Coat Stylet $2.19 1 1 r, American Tanks and Troops Enter Metz i " l (NBA ItmllaTtttiiltoln) Units of the 95th Division, U. S. Third Army, move past row upon run- i'f clfslrovcd c.rrm.n equipment a they fought street by street through Met the first lime In the hi:; . .. u modern warfare that tills fortretu city had been pierced by frontai auault. All major Natl resistance hat fc:jn wiped out in the bitterly defend-, ed bastion. Signal Oorps mdio-tolcolioio. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued from Page One) Rhine at this point isn't too strongly held by the nazie. THE big battle is still between Aachen and Cologne. Here the Germans have committed the bulk of their BEST troops. It seems to be a do or die battle on their part. Note- that the Germans are fighting with their BACKS TO A RIVER always a desperate 1 and dangerous military enter prise, ureat Hanmeais tarw aginian army in Italy, after IS years of success, was finally caught with its back to a river iand finished off. Fighting IN FRONT O a river is vastly MORE dangerous in these days of bombing from the air. which can DESTROY THE BRIDGES. . WfATCH this Aachen-Cologne " battle. Jt may develop into one of the decisive struggles of history. We MIGHT destroy Germany's western armies there. j "THE Russians spring a new of ! A fensive in Slovakia just north of where they are fighting to outflank Budapest, It looks like they're using (as wo are on the western front) their super iority of numbers to stretch the defending nazis THIN. THERE is an interesting de vplonmenfc nn th internation al political front. Churchill, in a surprise rnanxsgiving aaaress, says: in three, or four years the United States has become the greatest military, naval and air power IN THE WORLD." That, he says, is cause for American thanksgiving. He adds that it is cause for BRITISH thanksgiving also "BECAUSE under the compulsion 01 myster ious and all-powerful destiny WE ARE TOGETHER . . . shod dins our blood side by side, struggling for the same ideals and joined together until the triumph of the great cause which we serve nas cccn maac mam fest." TT is a nice concession from ! x Britain, for some four centur 1 les mistress of the world, but we ! can't help wondering WHY it is made. Is Churchill, intent on the mighty international poker game I already on, saying to STALIN: i "Look! We and the Amer j icans are TOGETHER, America I alone (not counting Britain) is I the GREATEST military, naval and air power in the world. Be ; fore pushing us too hard (in j eastern Europe, the Balkans, the Near East, etc.) you'd better take i another look at your hole card." . f"NE doesn't like to think such things in these days when men are dying In the final bloody stages of the war against Germany. But we mustn't forget that In EUROPE the diplomatic war of international politics is now fully as Important as the shoot- Allies CrOSS Rhine, jug war on the battlefields. History leaves no cioum as 10 that. We Americans w 1 be USED in this political warfare to what ever extent we are willing to PERMIT ourselves to bo used. We must keep that In mind from here on out. Canadian Cabinet In Crisis Over New Overseas Draft (Continued from Page One) Quebec were reported planning to withdraw support troni 1110 govermnent, and one cabinet member from Quebec, English speaking Air Minister G. G. Power, already had resigned. King declared last night he would seek to avoid a general election at this time, but it ap peared that events were mov ing too swiftly for him to be able to dictate their course. The government's new policy provides that 16,000 men may be sent overseas from the drafted home defense army, and that figure may be changed later as needs change. The step marked abandonment of five years of war effort under a system of vol unteer enlistment for service abroad. To Prime Minister King's counsel that those speaking of a lack of confidence' should con sider what alternative govern ment they would put in if he resigned, progressive conserva tives cried: "John Bracken." Bracken is national leader of that party. In announcing the switch to partial conscription, the govern ment took the position that the voluntary system of obtaining reinforcements had failed. Gen. A. G. McNaughton, de fense minister, told commons the 16,000 to be taken from the 60.000-man home defense army and sent overseas was the num ber required to meet foreseen re inforcements for overseas infan try formations. McNaughton said that when he entered the cabinet early this month he had believed the vol untary system would bring in adequate reinforcements , but added that "since then condi tions have altered." WEATHER Thursday. Novfmbrr -V 19 ft Max. Min. Prccln. Eujrent 2 S!i .in Klamath Talli -41 2H Trarr Sacramento fl.1 3J1 .nn North Bend M ! .00 Portland sn Med ford 93 Reno ...SO San Francisco fit Seattle 51 WHY QUINTUPLETS use this great rub for SORE THROAT COUGHSr.'COLDS Wonderful for Crows-Hps, Too! Evt tinea thy wer tiny tota when wit tha Quintuplet fitch floMtMr chwta, throat and hucksirelmmediattly rubbed with MuateTole. Muflttrol glvfti mcb bIMd prompt relief because it' more than juat an ordinary "nalvi." It's what no many Doctors and Nuntescalli modern counter irritant. It not only rcliftva ought, son throat, aching chest muscta due to colds, makes breathing easier but it attvattv bftlpa break up eongettim In upper bron chial tract, now and throat. And MusUrole fi 10 much eurier to apply than a mustard plaatw. White, Stainless. Juat rub It ont "No futi. No nun with MuttcroW" IN 3 STRENGTHS t Children' Mild MusUrole, Regular, ind Extra Strong. FUNERAL JANfT MARIE fiLF.Nrf Janet Mrle Glenn. Infant daughter Af Mr. and Mrs. Claude Glenn nf Klam ath Patii, panard away in Ihia city on Thursday mornlnf. November 2't. 1044. Janet Marie wan a native of Klamath Tallf and was aged 10 days when called. Beside her parents, she Is survived hy a brother, Frankle, and a sinter, Bar ber, Ray, both of Klamath rails! and her maternal srandmothrr. Mrs. Vina McKenzle of Oxnard, Calif. The re mains rest at Ward's Klamath Funeral home. 023 Hish street, where friends may eall. German Blow Drives Britons From Towns (Continued from Pago One) Heavy artillery pounded the tributary of the Rocr. Futil. Atttmpt Berlin asserted earlier In the day that the allies attempted (utilely to selie one of the three niilnc bridges outside Stras bourg, Alsatian city of 103,000 connected by a two-mile canal to the Rhine. The rcoortcd cross. ing ot the swilt and wide iiuoer Hninc did not necessarily consti tute Ilia stieuriicnd or a major drive across the border stream. Well over 40,000 Germans have been captured by the six allied armies on the ofiensivo in the current campuiim. This swelled the total since D-Day to around 7UU.UUU men, or almost SO lull .ilrcnRth divisions. Counting kiiicu una wotinaea, loiai uer man casualties for the new win. tcr offensive were estimated at supreme headquarters at 160,000 town uotrat.d The famous French second armored division commanded by MaJ. Gen. Jucquos Le Clcrc crashed into Strasbourg yester day after an 18-mile advance and oy noon had cleared the foe from all the narrow, crooked streets in the western part of the city. By 4 p. m., the whole town was liberated except for the Rhine bridge approach two nines irom tne comer of Stras. boure. It was heavily mined, biuuu.v cieicnnen ana intaci. Von Hundstcdt massed his dl visions, half of them tank outfits, along a 25-mile front on the cologne plain from north of Geil-en-Kirchcn to the bloody Hurt sen forest, and these wero the best the Germans could muster in western Europe. They faced the massed and charging might of three allied armies, the American first and ninth and the British second. 23 Ticior Royals Of the ninth army's toll of 1 10 tanks, 23 were the new Tiger Royals monsters with six-inch skins. The battle was almost amphibi ous. Three days of rain left inches of water standing op the fields, and the streams were well out of their banks and rag ing. The resolute British backed onto high ground from Hoven and Bceck and there were re ported standing firm. Gillctti Pleads Guilty to Drunk Driving Charge Anthony G. Gllloltl, 18, rotile 1, box 71111, cntfietl a pluii of guilty to a rluttgi" ot nprnillng a motor vehicle while under the Influence til' lltiuor ftilkiwinu mi accident lit .S til U tint! I'J. Mitiu lit 0:03 p. m. Thursday involv ing GlIlelli'H cur mid a Hun'.v cub operated by Kttgene Drunk". According In the re pint, Brooks hud slopped lit a red light entering tiust Main when Gillctti struck the. rem' of Ihe cab. Damage, was indicted to both cars Brooks signed the complaint and lilllrlti paid a fine ot 5100, received days anil suspension of his driver's license, Lanqcll Valley Mr. and Mrs. Dale Brown and children arc hero trom C'ctlnr vllle. Calif., visiting friends ulid relatives. Friends will be sorry to hear that Mrs. Frank Unnmvcll has been seriuusly ill during thti post six weeks. Klie Is rcpurlcu to be recovering slowly, Hazel Lounns, a (tinner Lan gell Valley girl, has Joined the Waves. Hazel Is the granddaugh ter of Mrs- Cora Ticknor, and worked at Tulelakc before her enlist incut. Mr. and Mrs. Oni Johnson and Mrs. Mary Dearborn wero dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill BuVneU on Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Jones of Klamath Falls came mil Satur day evening to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mart-hunt and family. Mrs- Wesley Dearborn and son, Henry, and Mrs. Lester Lcavilt enjoyed luncheon wilh Mrs. Alary Dearborn of Doinuuu on Thursday. Bob Prpplo Is carrying the mall while Owen Tcpi'lo is visit, ing his sun in Seattle. Mrs. Harney Drown and Mrs. Homer Roberts visited Mrs. Wes ley Dearborn on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. I. any Georges and Joylenn of Klatnallt Falls spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Burnett and family Mrs. Cecil Conley and Mrs. Johnnie Campbell will entertain the Langell Valley Women's club at the parrish hall on No vember 30. Everyone Is cor dially invited. Pipo This Stunt ... w 4. ;y,r s k i . is ,7 Muyno you can t grit your fa vorite brand of cigaiot, but dun't let that slop you If ynu wniit a smoke. You can always do Ilka Virginia Pioslnn of Washington, D, C, Is doing line pull a pipo. Dance Proceeds Given To Community Fund The Klamath county combined community fund has received S333.71, allocated to the USO budget. The'stim Is the proceeds from the benefit dance put on Jointly by Klamath Falls lodge 1100 and Merrill lodge 3JIU, Loyal Order of the Moose, on Armistice night. Total amount taken Into the fund to date Is S01, 177.01. Box Office Opens 6:4B -Ends Tonight- "Cover Girl" Second Hit "BABY FACE MORGAN" SATURDAY Strange! fantastic! mm T.flsH .. I. anai iV nfljfrxiJj Joha CAR RADINE Robot 10WRY Oils STORM Hinlis Moului -Second Hit Texas Marshal' Hans Norland Fir Insurance. Phone 60G0. OBITUARY EMMA CAROLYN SOME! Emms Cnrolyn Somen, a rc(ifnt nf Dorr In. Calif., for tho past nni nr.d one-hnlf jean, .pnrcd uway In (hut rlty Wednesday. November 22. Intl. The deceased wpi native of Eureka, Calif., and waa aRod AO yearn, 0 month and 7 days when called- Beside hrr husband, James E,, of Dorrts, she Is survived hy a son. James H. Sargent, tT. 8. navy; two brothern, Fred It. ami Wilbur D. Hamann, hnlh of Eureka, Calif.; three Miters, Mrs. Helen Ny ffard, Mrs. GeorKia Gibson and Horn Hamann, all of Eurekn, Cnllf., and n Srandson. The remalna were shipped on Thursday evening. November 2.1, via Hallway Express, to the Pierre funeral parlora, Eureka, Calif. Ward'a Klnmnth Funeral home Is In chargo of shipping ITCH-BORf m m irtt art rouh or dry, oHtti find lonstd-lot ri M In tilt bland, comfortlni action of I OINTMENT 1 AND SOAP : RESINQL0! Friendly Helpfulness To Evtry Crttd and Purst Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite M. Ward . and Sons AMBULANCE SERVICE 825 High Phont 3334 Continuous Show Daily Opens 12:30 Ends Today VA Lady Takes A Chance" "Glldonlttvs on Broadway" -SATURDAY- Kt IKIMSuriOH IIU ! M STARTS TODAY YOUR FAVORITE AT HIS BEST! CHARLES STARRETT SS, V! ATHENS SECOND HIT . mil: Plu: L.rry PARKS Lynn MERRICK Ry WALKER Danny O'NEIL Frottlt .nil J.nn HUBERT Tli CHORDS King Col TRIO Judy CLAKK 4 Scloctcd Short Subjocti Latest Newi (C' 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 , .. ' o Nluniin tit i,n ,.,. ' Hnhler .li,, wrK 'U'.'m. ni,,i,. . c m i g " '. iihotil 1S nlrll v?' ylKlhuiee i,Ki, " , ' "inl!j fort to it,,,,, 7 "implies. Mnu,,,, wu h'"'.!.s .,(f li''lo lil...tl. Ktli-niv nl, , .f1, ""Ijftrnwlrote,' ""i 1'ntin'. -min lll.X Ofli,.,. .. . .""I I 'U'phuiic .507 j . now a ROGERS -."TRIOOIR".. MAY III MU yNtg TOWER ESQUIRE Sunday IRENE DUNN . CHARLES BOYU 'Together Agaii eh! Box Office Opcn 1:30-619 Ends Saturday V ...-",,,,bS I n if At! 7 l - vf DUK S MtKfiICK ARTHUR SPACE Another Thrill H im a-. r.if i . iS i illlllll mam 1 Starts Hi"'"" -Midnight- PRISCILLA LANE WAYNE M0" "Brother Ra''