The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 12, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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71m OSEGOtf STATESMAM,: Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning. August 12. IS
.:- : "No Favor Sway U; No Fear Shall Awe", .-,
.: - Tram first Statesman, March 28, 1S51
THE STATES3IAN PUBLISHING COMPANY : , - i
. . CHAR .Eft A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher j
-Member of the Associated Press j - p
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to tha dm for publication ol alt
news dispatches credited to it or not .otherwise credited in this newspaper
Case for Poland
Prime Minister Mikolajczyk of the Polish
Cabinet domiciled in London, has not been able
to effect a working agreement with the Polish
committee set up in Russia, but does not give
lip hopes of some settlement to coordinate the
groups interested in Poland. He is said to be
returning to London for 'further conversations
negotiations have not been broken off and that
the prime minister was given audience by Sta
lin and Molotov.
An impressive case in behalf of Poland is
made by the prime minister as told to George
Creel and related in the current Collier's. He
answers charges that Poland is undemocratic
and intolerant by citing the origins of his cabi
net, none of whom is wealthy or nobly born, and
by asserting that the dross of past intolerance
has' been burned away in the fires of this war.
Going over the dispute with Russia he re
views these facts:
1. The Polish-Russian boundary was defined
in a treaty which Lenin described as "a volun
tary, and just agreement that will stand for all
time'.' Non-agression pacts between the two
countries were signed in 1932 and in 1934, ex
tending to 1945. After the partition of Poland
by Germany and Russia in 1939, when Russia
was attacked by Hitler in 1941 Poland offered
assistance to Russia and entered into an agree
ment for mutual aid and support, and Russia
relinquished all claim to Polish territory it had
seized. - ' . -
,2. Respecting the rupture which grew out of
the Polish cabinet's appeal to the International
Red Cross for; investigation of German radio
claims that Russians .had murdered and buried
In a mass grave 11,000 Polish officers, the prime
minister says there was no other way of ascer
taining the truth and that at the time his cabi
net rejected the German claims. Tv
3. Mikolajczyk asserts "his government is
eager, to renew relations with Russia and to
work out a mutually satisfactory treaty, and
that the Polish underground controlled by the
London cabinet is working in full cooperation
with the invading Russians.
; Poland surely has claim to the world's sup
port. It refused to make a deal with Hitler, who
promised joint gains if Poland joined in an at
tack on Russia. It delayed mobilization in 1939
at the request of Great Britain and France so
as not to-provoke Hitler to action. Five million
of its people -were murdered by the Germans
Mewl 4ia -ni1rMi anf - 1Vui Mimrtsi fn 4tta
fxs e n v iiiimyiig wa w w wmijb a
reich. Polish armies are fighting now on many
fronts. The Polish second corps carried the
heights of Monte Cassino. Polish air forces and
naval vessels have joined in the fighting against
Germany. Poland has had no quislings; it has
an- organized underground which now is con
testing "for possession of Warsaw.
According to Mikolajczyk, Poland is ready
to join in "a united Europe as a member of a
world organization pledged to collective-security."
He asserts that recognition of Poland's
claims, to its own territory in accordance with
the provision of the Atlantic charter will give
heartening assurance to l small nations of the
sincerity of the united nations. He. makes this
final point: - ' . " ";.
A free Poland, without festering. grievances,
: can and will make an important contribution to .;
: the peace and stability that are Europe's vital
needs. A wronged Poland, suffering from a deep
conviction of injustice, may be counted on as a
" continuing sources of unrest and instability. This
' is not a threat in any sense, but a plain statement
of fact. Look back over history and you will find
that while Poland has been swallowed many
times, never once has she been digested. Four
partitions years of ravage and oppression
. could not crush us. ;-TvT- V --7 -! '
'T It is not too much to hope that Russia itself
will see the value of having in Poland a friendly
rather than an aggrieved neighbor, and so be.
wUlina to make an amicable-agreement over
boundaries. ' -V.-,- y . .v - - .
0 -j-
Editorial Comment
! . From Other Papers
HISTORY IS REPEATING
Sixty years ago, when The Dalles was the head
of navigation, virtually all commerce for the In
land Empire moved through this. city. The railroads
came, river traffic declined and eventually we lost
this advantageous position.
Yet, the Columbia, river continued to flow by
our door. Our natural advantages had not disap
peared. They merely rested In status quo, as it were,
awaiting the advent ofthe present generation to
develop them.
Consider the announcement that a Portland lum
ber company soon will start logging operations back
, of Goldendale. Despite the fact that .a railroad
serves this area, the logs will be trucked to Mary
hill, dumped into the Columbia river arid formed1
into small, cigar-shaped rafts and . towed to The
Dalles. Here they will be formed into larger rafts
and moved on down, the Columbia river to the Port
land milt L: : - . 2rv-::"?ii .y'',, i:,-'i:x
This operation proves that The Dalles, as the
head of deep water navigation in the Columbia
river, again will come into its own. We mention the
logging operation just by way of illustration. In-
numerable other products could be cited. For that
matter, there is no reason why logs. could not be
milled into lumber at The Dalles and this lumber
shipped out on the ocean steamships that will make
this city a port of caff after the war is over and
. channel dredging has been completed. - ..
The. Inland Empire is a fertile and productive
area. Tonnage potentialities are. tremendous and
barge operation has proved economically feasible.
As the bead of ocean navigation The Dalles will
stand an excellent chance to capitalize on this post-
war traffic.-.; t-? vu--."i;
It wO be the. situation that prevailed 69 years
ago, only larger in scope and of far greater, magni
tude by reason of population growth and increased
production in areas tributary to this great inland
waterway. The Dalles Chronicle. '.'
Fluid Motor Front I j t
Usher Brothers, who gained fame and for
tune as designers and manufacturers pf auto
mobile bodies, ami whose business was finally
merged with General Motors, nave announced
their retirement from executive positions with
the latter firm in order to resume independent
business. While their exact plans are not an
nounced, it is anticipated they will be back; in
the, automotive game, perhaps as j builders of
automobiles themselves. This news has height
ened interest in the postwar outlook for motor
cars. - ' , p .
Without doubt things are stirring in Detroit,
the motor capital. Graham-Paige is reforming
its lines and expects to buQd cars again along
with farm machinery. Willys-Overland hopes
to exploit its reputation as a builder of jeeps
and to market successfully a small automobile.
Hupp Motor, which hadn't made an automobile
for years, has seen its stock go at better than $3
a share on the stock exchange, indicating hopes,
to say the least, And Henry .Ford's announce
ment of intention to build a car selling for
around $500 has confused some ; of . the other
manufacturers who were talking all the while
of price increases of from 15 to 25 per cent;on
automobiles of the 1942 quality. 1 i i '
At any rate, the end of the war will see ihe
resumption of keen competition among ' motor
car-makers. While there will be business for all
for several years, each will hope in the transi
tion period' to capture the public eye and im
prove its relative position. There is nothing sta
tic in Detroit, and the fact that Fisher Brothers,
who are old enough and wealthy enough to re
tire if they want to, are instead planning new
enterprises, and the fact that Henry Ford at! 82
is talking about a new lower-priced car; offers
heartening proof that free enterprise is still
alive whose fruits are not (merely the profits
of the entrepreneurs but the provision of more
and better and cheaper things for mass con
sumption. The motor front'promises to be "flu
id" like the war in France, i l ! 1
The Bend Bulletin reports a frost which
singed the tops of, garden vegetables. It does '
not say whether it was an early fall frost or a
late spring frost. The seasons telescope like that
in the high country. j ! " t r
Washington has ordered a reduction in the:
WACs, not in number but in weight; It seems
the WACs, like the GI Joes, put on weight when
they put on khaki. The war department evi
dently thinks fat makes poor1 armor for a woman
soldier. r ' ;" f ! :l I' '! r !
OPA is republishing its rules and regula
tions, and is compressing them into 12 volumes
instead of 18. The war ought to end in the time
it takes to- thumb through the set. .1 .
When it comes to dealing with Goering, it
will not be-necessary to hang himj Just throw
him in the river; his medals will sink him.'
UnSerp
ret in
in the .know v
' Fifth victory , loan drive went over the top .
some wag said, "On the next drive there will only
be "E," "F and "G" bonds that stands for
"Eleanor," "Franklin and "God," as they are the
only ones who know where the money goes." "
- Salem Cherrian.
-;0 -t -? C rots ffcO 4f?ST'
J !! V
Japanese Saiidmanl .... i . ; ... y ' ',- . ' f r.: '
MEUSEE
; . j
;at tic FROim . ;
- Countless Ilallana ;
rope to Scdl Far ;
America After War
Dinisiie WasQuiiniini
Special to Central Press
, WASinNGTONjf Henry Agard
Wallace may have been dumped
. as President Roosevelt's running
mate for the fourth term, but
his friends are predicting jhe will
torn up;smiling irjSan important
government post if, the democrats
are victorious again in Novem
ber.
!
!
The War Neivi
. By KIRKE L. SIMPSON A ' v
ASSOCIATED PRESS Vf AA ANALYST
' There are broad intimatioias from German end
high-placed allied military sources alike that; 'de
spite fanatical demands from Berlin the nazi com
mander in northern France has sensed his danger
of envelopment and begun a jretreat to the Seine
perhaps too late. ' 1 : : . - j I; " i ll " j ;'. '
That was the purport of f an all's well1 : mes-
sage relayed to his troops by General Montgomery,
allied field commander in France, Enemy armies
from the channel coast to the lire were "in a bad
way," he said, with allied spMrrieads "round be
hind them in many places' arid some of them "may
'not get away." : :-: i: yc ..:4f: -.-s!ir
- " Nazi broadcasts more than; confirmed that Mont
gomery thumb-nail sketch of the: situation. .They
told of multiple American columns wheeling north
eastward from their lunging; stride up the Loire
valley, feeling for contacts with Canadians oh the
allied left of the line that would encircle the whole '
center segment of the main German army in France,
perhaps 300,000 strong. , I ; ' ,
Allied strategic bombing operations far behind
the enemy front had the same meaning., Every rail
yard and junction, road hub and bridge east of the
Seine - through northeastern jFrance and the low
countries was a target while support bombers blast
ed along the Seine and west of the river. No avenue
of enemy reinforcement or escape from Paris to the
sea was being overlooked. . t ; i "
Most of all German surrender of British in
vested ThuryHarcourt In the little hills oi Nor
mandy' on the Canadian righ reflected the begin
ning of a possible nazi rnilitary debacle in France.
Mass "disengagement' moves ijby the foe to pull out
of the indicated multiple trap set for him without
either air power to shelter his retreating columns
or armor to halt allied tank-lunges at. his commu
nication jugular veimvin the deep rear must become
a desperate and bloody business. Given good wea
ther, it could give massed allied air power its great
est field day of the war, make the Seine and its
tributaries run red with German blood.
For the significant word in Mratomery's mes-
sage was "many. He so described the; fast-moving
' mechanized columns surging down Into enemy rear
echelons from the north but; even more critically
up from ihe south. Just wher each deadly armored
threat is at any moment Montgomery must know;
-but the Germans do not, nor where at his-word each
will next turn to achieve maximum results from
the expanding break-through. J ; ! liX'-if 1
The Montgomery . trap is apparently a" many-
jawed affair. By his own word it is yawning first
to chew-up the bulk of the German army in north
western France and secondly to take Paris in its
i maw. - i ' , J
Somewhere in France now Montgomery's com
mander, General Eisenhower, has set up his su
preme allied headquarters. H is: a fair assumption
. that its primary concern everji now is not the battle
in the Seme-Loire basins corhing swiftly to its cli
max, but what is to follow. I H- '
Eisenhower gave a hint of how the battle is to
- be fought on beyond Paris and the Seine, in the low
- countries that still house enemy robot bomb bat
teries, when he ' merged his j massed kir and sub
stantial ground forces into one separate army under
, single command to strike, swiftly tnd terribly at
- long range even far , behind, leneay. front tacs.. .:
Berths meationed for Wallace
include 'the ambassadorships to
rither Russia or China drfsome
roving assigrpent j for the presi
dent. Despite Roosevelt's 1 failure
to give strong support to Wallace
at the idemofraticj national con
vention, j thf vice president's
supporters are certain that the
shaggjvhaired, idealistic lowan
is suHj a Wiiite spouse, nyorite
and. would Command moch at
tentfon tn the assignment -of an
important wartime or postwar
diplomatic post "j ; J j
Observers reoalj that Wallace
has -. been virtually hound dog
faithful to the president yen in
the face! of biting! j White; Jlous
criUcismi of -some jof hi fstate
ments land they also remember
that Roosevelt has given Wallace .
a double endorsement in! recent
inoirths.-; .. , .
First was Ihe sendoff accord
. ed Wallace by the1 president up
on departure tat, Russia! and
Chttuuj Second Was the;; White
House! letter', to the democratic
convention in which the! presi
dent said: i j : jjj j L;
. "If I were a delegate, etc." i
M ' M f f lf ! r
j The ! possibility j of a sudden
Germin defeat has left) many
Washington observers wonder
ing ; whether the allies have a
full-fledged plan 'for occupation
and control jpf Getmanyjin the
wake of unconditional surrender
termsj ..
; Some fear that IGermanyJ now
admittedly in .the! throes, of its
most important internal crisis of
. the war,' may be j plunged; into
the same confusion that overtook
Italy-f-that war-guilty criminals
may escape, temprarily, as did
Mussolini, and that anarchy may.
rule the land. : I j
The situation Is - one ;of the
most
In
pressing'
Washington.!
aU the talk
which ;
besets
of "cutbacks"
and reconversion, one fact has
gone unnoticed. This is the in
crease of nearly one billion dol
lars in the army's supply sched
ule for 1944. n
Hence, the warnings of the
.military that production, goals:
have not been met For the first
r half of the year, only 48 per
cent of the army's schedules -were
achieved. .J" J.
WPBs gtowing accounts of
production performances, the
military says, are based on first-of-the-month
predictions as- to
what can be attained in that -month.
They are not based ! on
the army's needs and do not re
flect accomplishments measured
against the over-all program laid
down ii at the beginning of the
"".year. ! ' ,t , 1 1
; High military officials are
-concerned 1 because they- know '
that ' the- final grand assault
against Germany will ' consume
war ' materials in unprecedented
quantities. ; They warn that the
small month-to-month lags- in
production are cumulative and
:- are not being made up. '; r
For example, truck production
is expected to fall 80,000'vehicles
short of army requirements if
the present lags continue for the
remainder of the year.
S ri-. : '" - - - 'r f -
Today 'c Garden
By LTLUE MADSEN ' .
Mrs! G. S. A. writes to ask
- about the small tree blooming on
the post office lawn. Says she
has never seen anything; more
beautiful and wants to know if
one can buy such, a tree, is it
hard to grow and is it expensive?
. An&r The tree is the Chinese
Silk tree (Albiziia julibrissin). It
can be purchased from local nur
serymen, but it is rather expen
sive. However, there is no tree
lovelier and it is very pretty even
when not in bloom. The foliage
' is attractive. Good drainage is
essential and some water is need
ed in very dry seasons. It does
not bloom until it has been grow
ing In the same location for some
time. 1 1 believe the cost ; varies
from around $4 to twice that
much, depending upon the size of
the tree. - - ' ,
By GEORGE BRIA i
(Subbing for Kenneth L. Dixon)
ROME, Aug. 4-(Delayed)-(P)
-In every corner of liberated
Italy today, Italians ask me the
same hopeful question: "WiQ we
be able to go to the United States
after theowtrrt .:. -..";:v
And it doesnt come from just
the - disillusioned, bitter , youth
who are unable to see any future
In this war-ravaged land. Middle-aged
men professional 'men
have told me: "We want to get ;
out of here. We want to go to ,
America."'- ': J ."' 1 rv- I ' .
So the truth Is that countless
Italians are sick of Italy for po
litical as wen as economic ;re;
sons and they; pin their hopes :
on "a new - lif e . overseas.'"
Emigration " consequently . is
sure to be one of the burning.
Issues in postwar-Italy and the
Italian press already has begun
to call for a scrapping of the.
"auota system." whereby I less J
than 4000 Italian emigrants were
allowed to enter me United
States each year. -j. : "
: Here are some of the argu-;
ments they give for a revision
of this system: V 1
1. A victorious United States
will be the only country tn the
world to which a war-torn hu
manity will be able to .turn for '
commodities and supplies for at
least 10 years. This will mean a-,
tremendous -increase in Ameri
can production and a consequent ,
need for labor. Italian labor,
knows no peer.',. . ' hi,
2. ' With all the reconstruction
that will be necessary in Italy,'
the country will be unable to em-
ploy- all of its -labor potential.
Italy'ls rich" in human quantity ,
but poor In natural resources.
The surplus labor can be put to
work in America, producing the
materials necessary to recon
struct Italy. . -
3. Before 1914, more than 200,-
000 Italian; workmen went to the
United States every year. From
those immigrants came"a steady
stream of money which "rejuve
nated"! thei Italian treasury. The
Italian' treasury now certainly
needs frejuveration." .
4. American ! organized labor
opposed mass immigration after
World War 1 on the grounds that
the labor market would be
swamped; but the devastation
wrought in Europe by this war
is so great that American indus
try would be able to employ ev
ery available workman to pro-
: duce the 'materials for recon
struction. "There will be work
and bread for all."
Italian lawyers on emigration
have treated the subject exclus
ively from the economic view
pointas 4 "necessary evil." If
you talk to individual Italians,
however, you find that many of
them want to go to America so
that "I will be left alone," and
so that "I wul have some free
dom." Marry of them predict that
the Italians wfll start shooting
each other just as soon a the al
lies leave, and they are too tired,
too cynical and too disillusioned
to take part in It "
The United States is not the
only country rich in natural re
sources which could use Italian
labor. There is Russia, for exam
ple, but while there is much talk
about Russian prestige in Italy,
1 haven't met one Italian -who
wanted to go there.
(Continued from Page 1)
supper. It is just an eat sit and
listen club, exerting only the or
gans of digestion and of hearing.)
Members do not have- to sing
"Home on the Range " . , That, in
deed, is a dub to belong-to, un
less one has high blood pressure,
stomach ulcers or deafness, f ;
The organizer must have-been
an intrepid fellow, however; to
try to form a dinner club In these
days of rationed foods and green
wsdtressear In 7 other days j the
promise of a choice filet mignon
or roast Iamb and curry sauce,
with accompanying viands, would
be most tempting. But who wants
to sit down to another Kiwanis
K-ration of Salisbury steak with
"ration-free carrots? That pros
pect is uninviting, and only the
hardy souls whose digestive or
gans can outlast the war I are
brave enough to sign on the dot
ted line. Come peace, then the
club should have a waiting list,
provided turkeys are aU lend
lost - ; - - - ivi
At any rate, Salem greets its
newest club. What tiie square
and compass are to the Mason,
the knife and fork are to these
epicures, symbols as well as tools
of me crart Presumably the
club's crest is a valiant trencher
man facing a beef roast rampant
And for motto, surely not the old
English proverb, "More are slain
by suppers, than the sword, but
rather that from Ben Franklin's
Poor Richard: "Eat to live and
not live to eat" i -
From a Window in
a
nPs
House
By Don Blanding ' j f -
..: -: , THB BLOOD DONORS
- It is such a little price to pay for a great spiritual experience.
You give an hour of your time (an hour which might be spent
at a movie, in, idle chatter, in futile worry or useless day-deam-ing)
in -exchange lor a deeply moving adventure. In addition, you
will have the satisfying feeling, of having, in part repaid a debt
(oh, not Paid in Full by any means, but a fine installment of that
debt). Go to any one of the Blood j
Procurement centers and give . . .
no, lend-lease a pint of the pre
cious body-fluid from which the
miracle plasma is obtained. -
Truly, yon win never forget this
hour. It wul be filled with exhal
tation, tranquility and thankful
ness mat so easily one may give
so greatly. The gift of life between
men is a great gift Your only re
gret will be that you did not make
this gift earlier so that your sec
ond date with life would come
sooner. .-"; -"y,y. y:u . ,
' You will take part in the an
cient ritual of the Bond of Blood
Brotherhood, but this time it wOl
not be merely symbolic; it. win be
actual Although there is no hush
hush, nor .solemnity in the quiet
room where 20 or more of you win
be lying relaxed, there is that
sense of holiness,' the vibrant ser
enity, the invisible radiance which
surrounds shrines' where people
pray. Every face reveals the fact
that while the precious fluid
drains so quietly and painlessly
out the thoughts of the donors
are flowing out, quietly too, in
probably the most unselfish strain
they wul ever know. Look at those
faces about you. There . will be
many service men and women;
theirs is a double giving, the days
of their years and the . blood of
their veins. But most of them
know what this giving means, God,
The Literary;
Guidepo
THE YOUNG IDEA"
I-
By Mossier
I l iei ... ,tt
M it I II
- mm ' 1 1
. " .iii- i . ' I
"Thomas! Cave yon been vslcg my ereLrew pencil ea year
r v
srstaclie slsl
ASHLEY. BOOK OF
' KNOTS" by CUfferd W Ash
ler (DoabledaT. Deraa; S73f ).
If something like a pun seems,
to turn up in this brief piece on
Clifford W, Ashley's "The Ash
ley Book of Knots," it is unin
tentional. The-book, its title, and
its contents- are aU - pun-breed-;
ers.;V ':ry:v. z;t -X
To begin with, one should
know that Mr. Ashley is a ma
rine painter, and a member of a
sailing family. A j couple of
whaler - uncles began teaching
-him nautical knots (you see,
it's almost impossible to keep
rrom punning), and the; next
thing he knew, his notebook
contained ' hundreds of exam
plea. In fact there came a time
when he had noted an the nau
tical knots, and had! to transfer
. his activities. He began haunting
butchers counters, operating
rooms, Jails where hangings
were imminent, steeplejacks
headquarters, Boy Scouts huts,
-electric linesmen's union i hall
and even the summer ! hotel
porches on which old ladies knit j
and talk the warm months away.
When Mr. Ashley's collection
' reached 3900" he cast about for
something to do with them, and
the idea of a book arose. He was
perfectly suited to the idea, be
ing a painter. He discussed. the
knots by classifications, and then
wrote about the method of ty
ing thenu He drew illustrations
to help with this last so. that
in addition to S300 knots duly
described, the book, contains
! also 7000 drawings. It should be
obvious by now that TThe Ash
ley Book of Knots" is enormous.
"Anthony Adverse a pocket
book by comparison. -
The alphabetical range of the
knot is fabulous. Archers: knots
are first; yachtsmen's knots last
there rPar to be some rje-
rial ones for yachtsmen that are
not needed aboard real ships.
" Florists knots call up the nicest
1 images, and hangman's knots
are least attractive. Which la not
; quite - true they actually are
nice, knots, but there Is somcr
' thing, shivery I about their use.
And finally, the knot is divisible
into neat chapters. I was espe-
daily taken with the one caned
"The: Turks-head." This Is the
knot you. see tied around some
. thing: around a ; vaulting pole;
. for example, to 'add strength.
The Turk's-head isj useful knot
It turns up on anything from
wicker furniture to a quirt -
CAMOUFLAGE TOO EZFEKT
'CAMP B ARKELEY, TtxMlto-
During a recent - field exercise
Tech. Fifth Gr. John Littler
searched vainly tor his camou
flaged half-track. Hours later he
stumbled on it, right where he
left it after passing the same
placj about five times,
how they know it! They are able
to visualize as clearly as though
vein were Joined, to vein, the- glow
that returns to the drained faces
and-the light 4hat banishes the
dark shadowrof the fear of death
as the magic plasma releases life
through a stricken and shattered
body. The faces of these service
people are so quietly serene; they
axe so sure of what they are doing.
But there are other faces which
become tranquil as they realize the
directness- of this giving. Elderly
women who are giving for sons,
and : praying . that if the need
comes for their sons, some little
bit of this gift may be in the trans
fusion. And elderly' women who
may have no sons, and yet by this
act have a hundred sons, blood of
their blood now, through this mir
acle They are thinking of this,
you rnaybe sure, the lonely ones,
the sonless ones. .
Therelare young. women, brides
or sweethearts, with tears in their
eyes, tears with a strange happy
shimmering in them; one sees this
same look in the paintings of the
Madonnas. f
There Is a Ghristlike quality to
this giving of plasma which is in
spiring and hopeful for the world
After Duration. This blood Is not
marked with tags "for kith arid
kin of mine. For American. For
British. For French." No. There
are the ; Unspoken words, those
beautiful moving words, This is
my blood . , .? Period.
A. young marine,- back : from
Guadalcanal, expressed something
to think about when he said,
"When you get that plasma stuff
it makes you feel different about
people, I was a pretty independent
guy before, I could take folks or
leave 'em. They didnt bother me
much. Now, I walk down the street
and I took at folk's faces, men's
facea and women's faces. And I
wonder w i was Jt you or you
that gave me that blood, so that
rm walking along here enjoying
things instead of . wen, you get
the ideaw You're not so quick to
give; the growl when you dont
know but what that guy there is
the guy you owe your life to. It's
a good feeling."
Communion. "This is my blood
It is significant and splendid that
now when an men of the world are
directly involved irf this terrible
cataclysmic struggle, ; : that the
blood of all men shall flow back
and v forth; among, them, giving
where it is needed, without ques
tion, without stint And because
(Continued on Page 8)
Stevens
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