. Bian r meuivno MAIL TRIBUKS Thursday, Oct. 12, 1944
"Everyone In Southern Oregoa
Reads the Mail Trlbune'r
Dally Except Saturday
Published by
MEDFORD PBINTJ
CO.
I7-S9 North fir su
Phone 3M1.
ROBERT W. BUHL, Editor.
BRNEST R. GILSTRAP, Manager.
An Independent Newspaper.
fcntered as second class matter at
Mediord, Oregon, under Act of
March 3, 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
U.1L In Arfuanm'
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Daily and Sunday ilx month 4 00
Daily and Sunday three moa. a.iu
Dally and Sunday one month.. .75
ly Carrier In Advance Medford,
Ashland, Central Point, Jackson
ville. Gold Hill, Phoenix. Talent, end
on motor routea:
Dally and Sunday one yar....$800
Daily and Sunday one month .75
All term coin In advance.
F
fflelal Paper of the City of Medforl
Official rapar OI rfacaaun i.uv
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative!
WF.8T-HOLLIDAY COMPANY. INC
Olficea In New York, Chicago. De
troit, San Franclaco. Lot Angeles, Be
ttle, Portland. St. Louie, Atlanta.
Vancouver, B..C.
.ssnTfoa
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Prry
lUitlinnrv HpsianerS of liber-
Bted Paris are busy crating new
hats for the fair sex, and pic
tures of same are printed in the
papers. Even if they were
thought up in Paris they look
like the dickens. An American
designer in Ashland, Eugene or
Scappooe, couia give i"c"
twist to a green Turkish towel,
stick a rooster tall feather in
dead center and call the result,
Icy Breath of Winter.
e e
Fears that German morale
will be broken are dispelled by
an eminent medical authority
who knows the mental workings
of the Krauts. Their morale
cannot be broken, he argues
convincingly, because they have
no morale to break.
e
An upstate sportsman fears
"Rogue River will be ruined as
a recreation center". At one
time and another, Rogue River
has been "ruined" by every
thing but water and there have
been occasions when even the
water has been disapproved by
the fish and the fishers.
TIMELY
(Somerset (Pa.) American
"The undersigned will of
fer at public sale . . . Allis
Chalmers Tractor, Carriage
and Work Harness, New
Deal Manure Spreader, etc."
A British plan calls for the
establishment of a "Devil's
Island" for the punishment of
Nazi monsters and hoodlums.
The Idea is too sentimental. It
keeps Hcrr Hitler et al, away
from the personal supervision
and Jurisdiction of Satan. Inas
much as his realm Is their ulti
mata destination, the quicker
they get there the better. His
Satanic Majesty is waiting for
a chance to tell Gestapo Chief
Hlmmler to get behind, him.
The autumn leaves continue
to fall faster than the Older
Girls can talk their mates Into
raking them up.
The head of the Musicians'
Union defiance of a government
order continues. People are be
ginning to wonder why he Is
spared the Indignity of getting
packed out of his office by sol
diers a la Montgomery Ward
president.
The plan to change the name
of Berlin, Ore., to Dlstnmo, a
Greek town destroyed by the
Nazis, has been abandoned by
Its originator, Maxwell Ander
son, playwright of New York.
There are 18 other towns In the
nation bearing the namo of Ber
lin. All would much rather
have their monicker changed to
the name of tho first Yankee
soldier to march Into Berlin,
e e
jotina.w att jo Jut
xoorts faunqiax awi tins)
HV3A Sllli JlVJ.n Nt CI3NH.I
MVII SVH J.VIIM AO Vacil
NV nOA 3A10 AVPi SIHX
Gov. Brlcker of Ohio, GOP
vice president candidate, tomor
row eve appears at the depot in
person. It is hoped no partisan
forgets ho Is not In a darkened
movie and indulge in some reck
less booing.
e e
BREAKFAST It BUREAUS
"The best breakfast, contrib
titors to the symposium agree, is
one partaken of in serenity of
spirit, unvexed by train time
table, telephone calls, or col
lapse of the family heating ap
paratus. Peace of mind will do
more to Insure a propitious be
ginning of the day than any
product of a Washington stand
ardization bureau, seeking to
regulate the tastes and habits
of the American nation, possibly
with a view of regimenting the
orange or grapefruit crops, or
the supply of eggs and break
fast bacon. Rationing has al
ready Involved those necessi
ties of civilized life In a hope
less tangle from which only a
wholesale reduction in the num
ber of bureaucrats can rescue
us." (New York Hcrald-Trib-ximY.
The Left Or the Right?
Stanley High has an article in the current "Post"
entitled "Why the Left Wing f ears Dewey."
It is well worth reading and essentially true.
The Left Wine DOES
become President, left-wingers, potential dynamiters
and all the long-haired theoretical and revolutionary
ilk would be out of jobs
And after all, left-wingers are human. They want
jobs and good paying jobs
A ND the radical ones also want a complete change
?n fVio AmoviVan fnrm
a socialist form and the
canitalistic nrivate-profit
Thev could continue to
4 more vears of Roosevelt.
a dead stop under four years of Ltovernor Dewey.
So thev are all out in force to "GET" the Republi
can candidate and assure
answer to their political
Roosevelt.
This is the general theme of the author while this
is his conclusion:
But the leaders of those embattled forces who, this year,
have gone all out to entrench a different America are not
simple fellows. They have been getting us ready for such
a year as this for some time. They believe with some reason
thut they have got somewhere in the business of plowing
tinder America's belief In America of destroying the con
fidence of Americans in themselves and in one another.
They hope the country is ripe for the sort of alien, Government-dominated
system of life they want.
Only Tom Dewey seriously disturbs their dreams. They
saw him coming a long time ago, and in this autumn of 1944
he alarms them more than ever.
. .
CO far so eood.
But when Mr. High goes on to maintain, by im
plication at least, that the outstanding issue in this
campaign is between those who believe in destroying
the American form of government and those who
believe in maintaining it; between the country going
on to four more years of the socialistic New Deal, or
turning back to the nigged and individualistic Old
One the good old days, when men were men and
women put on diamond dog-collars for breakfast
well it isn't quite as bad
"NLY a small minority in this country seeks by
, revolution to destroy the American form of
democratic government, and no- matter who is elect
ed, they will never get to first base, in the next four
years or the next fourteen.
But there is a detinue
tween the Republican and Democratic parties as a
whole as to the proper course to take to best preserve
our democracy in this rapidly changing and increas
ingly perplexing world.
PRESIDENT Roosevelt does believe more and more
regimentation is necessary, more and more gov
ernment in business, turning more and more to the
left.
Governor Dewey on the other hand believes in
less regimentation, less and
ness, in turning more and
The Democrats claim the
Republicans claim if the former IS done, if the New
Dealers continue on their down hill socialistic path
ultimate destruction of the
ment can t be avoided.
Which side is wrong, which is right?
That is one of the important questions the voters
will be called upon to decide 3 or 4 weeks hence !
The Real Issue
As a postscript to the above, it is the conviction of
this department that whichever party wins November
ith a certain amount of what has become known as
regimentation will continue.
Not because anyone particularly likes it, but be
cause it will be found the security of the modem in
dustrial world demands it.
In other words, whether
cood old days of aboslute
!ged and unregulated individualism everyone for
himself and the devil take the hindmost have gone
and in all liklihood, never will return.
e .
DUT there is this difference between the Republi
u can and Democratic parties when the nature of
that future economic course is considered and a
very important difference.
There is no reason to doubt the Democrats under
Roosevelt if returned to power will continue to act
upon one basic assumption, namely: that business for
profit, big or little is suspect.
Let any fair-minded person review the past decade,
and this suspicion, this distrust of business ANY
business will run without a break through all the
New Deal philosophy.
And as a result of that suspicion, there has been
the inevitable product of suspicion and distrust,
namely, hostility. And if the Roosevelt administra
tion is continued for 4 more years that hostility toward
business will continue.
THE Republican doctrine is basically different.
A Business is not regarded as essentially wrong,
or inheriently wicked. As long as it obeys the law
and behaves itself, it will not be attacked and intimi
dated and blackmailed.
In other words it Governor Dewey is elected, he
will cooperate with business, not give business any
special privileges or allow any excessive profits but
give it encouragement, a free rein under the law, and
a square deal.
I For nearly 12 years, business, big or little, has not
ihad that sort of friendly attitude from the govern
ment. e believe it would not only be good for busi
ness but gooil for the country and all the people in it,
to vote for a change that would give it to them.
fear Dewey, for if he should
political jobs at least.
as much as anyone.
nf trnvprnmpnt ThpV want
destruction of the so-called
system.
make some headway with
They could be brought to
16 consecutive years for the
prayers, Franklin Delano
or as simple, as that.
issue in this campaign be
less government in busi
more to the right.
latter can t be done. Ihe
American form of govern-J
we like it or don't, the
business freedom, of rug-
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Washington, Oct. 12 Sparse
and softly agreeable comment in
congress on the post-war world
formula of
Dumbarton
Oaks does not
mean the proj
ect is being
taken lightly.
It Is being sub
jected to se
vere study
here as else-
where. Yet
there Is every
present pros
I'aul Mallon
pect that the
unfinished pro
posal will be approved not only
by a majority but a safe two-
thirds of the senate on the fol
lowing grounds:
e
THE formula Is based on the
T.onftitA ctf Mnflnne ihnnrv nf
running the world. Some tech
nical changes do not alter the
basic theme that a world coun
cil will Investigate aggressors
and Impose sanctions (economic
and social as well as military)
to deter the pugnacious.
The language has the same
ring as the league covenant,
which directed its council to
take action deemed wise and
effectual to safeguard the peace
of nations," and in article X
said:
'The members of the league
undertake to respect and pre
serve against external aggres
sion the territorial integrity and
existing political independence
of all members of the league . . ."
'The assembly may from time
to time advise . . . the consid
eration of international condi
tions whose continuance might
endanger the peace of the
world."
e
TTHIS proposal Is the league
plus the Kollogg-Briand
pact renouncing war, the world
court of Justice and the disarma
ment conference with really
only one critical difference. This
time the United States Is to un
dertake leadership of the all-rolled-lnto-one
world program
along with Russia and Britain
particularly.
This leadership Is to replace
Anglo-French leadership of the
old league in which Russia was
a trivial influence. The cast
changes but the ideal of the
play is not altered materially
and the script only pointed up.
This theory of peace has be
come popular because of a pre
vailing notion that the reason
that the league failed was be
cause the United States did not
join in its influence.
IT Is not my purpose to take
a position on the matter, only
to report how it proposes to
work. The Incomplete agreement
is like the charter of a club, a
world club pledged to peace.
This club is to be controlled
largely by an executive commit
tee called "the security council."
The composition of the com
mittee does not suggest that any
one, either the United States or
Russia, will wield greater influ
ence. Five permanent members
are to be the big five united na
tions, but in the voting six more
rotating members from smaller
notions will furnish the numeri
cal majority on whichever side
they go.
The all-Important details ol
the voting have not been agreed
upon (whether unanimity is nec
essary for action), but as the
agreement now stands, the com
plexion of the council will de
pend on the hue of the smaller
nations chosen for the one, two
and three-year terms.
e
THIS council cannot Itself
wage war, but can call upon
tho United Nations to wage
practically anything from social
isolation of a nation to Invasion.
The council is to be always
ready for action, although no
provisions for housing it arc
mentioned. I would think it
would be established in Wash
ington for this reason:
The league was largely a Euro
pean device. This is to be a
world device. To choose some
small neutral place such as Swit
zerland, or to use the old league
buildings there, would subject
It to the old unsatisfactory sur
roundings In which it was un
successful, Washington Is the na
tural background for its new
tone and Intent.
GUITAR PLAYER UPHELD
Pittsburgh, Oct. 12 dj.Ri A
man's right to play n guitar in
his home was upheld In court
here, when Robert G. MeCay.
2ti-year-old wnr worker, sought
n divorce against his wife. Me
Cay complained that his wife
revolted against his guitar
strumming so much that she
struck him with her fists, ash
trays, brooms and finally with
the guitar itself.
The famous song "Down by
the Old Mill Stream" refers to
the Blanchard River running
through Fremont, O. It was
written by Toll Taylor, who was
born on a farm near Fremont
in 187H and lived there until his
death in 1937.
' nra --iff , fT"
CITIZENS OF THE DANISH city of Odense rush to atop a prison van loaded with local compatriots arrested by the
Germans. Before German reinforcement! could be rushed in, the people were able to overturn the truck and free th
patriots for more of the resistance and sabotage which has been steadily plaguing the German invader in Denmark,
INN IS ELECTED
HEAD OF JUNIOR
L
Salem, Ore., Oct. 12 (U.R)
Oregon educators closed their
annual conference here late
Wednesday after a three-day ses
sion in which postwar school
problems formed the major
theme. Approximately 350 coun
ty and city school superintend
ents and high school principals
attended the sessions. Officers
elected by the various groups at
the closing sessions included the
following:
Oregon High School Princi
pals association Rein Jackson,
Portland, president: T. R. Pow
ers, McKenzie river, vice-president.
Junior High School Principals
association Glen L. Linn, Med
ford, president; Rollin Parks,
Ashland, Oregon State Teachers
asociation delegate.
City School Superintendents
association J. F. Schenk, Cor
vallis, president; J. L. Brecken
ridge, Hood River, vice-president;
Leonard Mayfield, Marsh
field, secretary-treasurer.
Mr. Linn, principal of Med
ford junior high school, was in
attendance at the sessions and
also present from here were E.
H. Hedrick, city school super
intendent, and Lester Harris,
senior high school principal.
Livestock
Portland. Ore . Oct. 12 (UPI Uve-
u. ISO- rnlvp. 150. LVS
active but early antes ateady. Cutter
common steers $7.50-9 50. C01111.K..1
heifers $8-9. Canner-cuttcr cows M ,50
a. .h.n. Hnu-n tn S4 Mprilum beef
cows held $8.50-9.50. Good-choice veal-
era Billable $13-11. ..rass caivua -dominating.
Early bida lower.
Hoks. 500. Active, steady. Good
choice 180-240 Ilia. $15 75; 241-300 lha.
$14 56-15. Good sows $13 25.14. Choice
feeder piss quotable to $14.
Sheep. 150. No early sales. Medium
good shorn lambs held above $10.
Good-choice wooled lambs quotable
SI 1.25-11.75. Good ewes salable $3
325. South San Francisco. Oct 13 (UP)
tt'SDA) Livestock:
Cattle. 150. Active, fully ateady,
medium to good ateers quoted $13-14;
load good 703-lb feeder heifers $11 75;
load good 1050-lb. northern range
cows $11.25, medium aged cows $tt So
lo 50. canners and cutters limited.
$tl-8. Early clearance all week. Calves,
none; nominal, quotable top $14.
Hogs. 250. Steady; few loads and
Eackages good to choice 200-240-lb
arrowa and gllta $15 50. odd good
255-lb. at $14 75; odd good sows $13 75.
Sheep. 300. Choice lambs quoted
$14. Packagea feeders $11-1150; cull
to good ewes salable $1.50-4.30.
Chicago, Oct 12 (UP) WFA
Livestock:
Hogs. 6.000; complete clearance
early; good and choice 130-240 lbs.
$14.75; heavier hoga and good and
choice sows $14.
Cattle. 4 500: calves. 800: top $18 33,
for 10.15 lbs. strictly choice yearlings;
best weighty steers $17.73; common
and medium grade steers $10-14 30:
fed heifers bulk 914 30-18 30: bulk
canners and cutters $3 25-6.75: beef
cows $7.75-11; good kinds to $14.
Sheep. 4 000; good and choice native
lambs $14 75-14 83; load good and
choice P2 lbs. fed shorn lambs with
Mo. 1 and No. 3 pelts $13 80; medium
to choice native ewes $3.23-6 23.
Portland Produce
Portland. Oct 13 (UP) Wholesale
market list:
Kcks To retailers: AA 5e; A large
33-.VU dozen.
Melons Ice Cream 1'i to 2c lb.
Cabbage No. 1 green round type
$2 73-3 crate
Celerv Oregon $3 23-8 30.
Cauliflower No. 1 local $183-173
Squash Local Ziicchlnnl "3c-$l;
California Zuechinnl $3 lug.
Chestnuts Local Italians 30c lb.
S. F. DAIRY PRICES
San Francisco, Oct. 12 (U.P.i
Dairy market:
Butter: 93 score 43, 92 score
42'5, 90
41-1.
score 42' i, 89 score
Cheese: Wholesale prices, loaf
7.9. triplets 27.
Eggs: Large grade A
5.1'j, medium grade A
47' i, small grade A
large grade B
38'j.
!S4' ; IT ;
46' u ..r
22' j f j
3 1' 2,11
I
WHY HE DANCED j
!.os Angeles. Oct. 12 0JR ,
I once wno suspeeiea uisnwasn
er Francisco ... Provencio's Joy
ous dancing on the sidewalk I
was not entirely natural found;
10 marijauana cigarettes in his,
HH-ivris. n iii u in.- iiuu.-e -
venled 119 more and
worth of marijauna.
$3,000.
Ca Mali RIBUiia Want Ada.
Danes Free Compatriots
' ))'
hi
Loveft's Kin
(Acme ictv photo)
Seeking to esutuuau Uie "cioiaJ
clear juaiousy mutive" in trial oJ
turs. r ranees Anurews on miuuci
cuaigcs 111 ueaiu ox Juy Leuvettj
piuacuuuua CAiieu LiUuier .uuveu jr,
it-etU"-uui uimuer ui dtiy, to buiud
to Leo ui y taut 110 luuiiu ".uve ' let
ters ijiu Hui u:uiy wt iiaeii ui yuuiitf
Juy uy uia uuiuiei vtuiey swtiuui
aeieiiatuit.
To Medford Lee B. Ryan of
Ashland was among Medford
business visitors Tuesday.
In Ashland Scth Bullis of
this city was a business caller
in Ashland Tuesday.
Speaker Karl Janouch of
this city was speaker at the
Ashlnnd Lions club Tuesday
night.
Visit Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
Lindner and Mrs. Bertha Heer
of Ashland were visitors in Med
ford the first of the week.
.
On Furlough Kenneth An
thony, T5, U. S. army, is spend
ing a furlough with his wife at
their home, 37 Quince street. He
is stationed at Camp Beale, Cal.,
and will remain here about a
week.
e
In School Miss Dovle Lee for
mer station attendant for United
Air Lines and now In the Spars,
is at present a student In the
coastguard's radio technician's
school at Staten Island. N. Y., a
news release from the Air Lines
states. Miss Lee was with the
local station for about a year
leaving here last fall. She has
three brothers and a fiance in
the armed forces.
Medford Marines
Return From Duty
Qn Pacific Front
Two Medford marines have re
cently returned to this country
from overseas duty according to
a dispatch from marine head
quarters in Portland. They are
Cpl. James Fenton Wyle and
Cpl. Glenn E. Deivert.
Cpl. Wyle is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Morton Arnold of route
1 and last fought at Saipan and
Tinian in the Marianas. His di
vision has been awarded the
presidential unit citation twice
for outstanding service, the dis-
patch states
Cpl. Deivert was with the sec-
ond marine division at Tinian
and wears the presidential unit
citation ribbon, twice awarded.'
He Is the sun of Mrs. Susie C.
Deivert, 303 South Oakdale ave-
mi0..
Now Mjnv Wear
FALSE TEETH
With Little Worry
w ,,k , or ,,, ,,,
f"r of man-urr i.nr t.-,"i .it.-i i-ing
H h
p ,.cs (,rnirr ami m.-
Til', rlc.t.r.t r-
' .1cr tin. no U';m,.,iv
. i - i '
C.lll.C IMli.fi.
r frrii:i( tW.'l t
.IWsline i non-acid ,
Checks chile ,),.
ire l-rratlv.
M nil J
p. .v m
r'.A p
m V '
'Get IASILi 111 at any druf store.
Flight Time
Medford and Jackson Co. His
tory from the files of the Mail
Tribune 10. 20. and 34 years
ago.
10 YEARS AGO TODAY
October 12. 1934
(It Was Friday)
Ransom paid by family for
return of kidnapped Louisville
society woman.
Pear shipments from valley
to date total 1638 cars.
State PUC orders eight per
cent cut in telephone rates in
state.
Peter Zimmerman, independ
ent candidate for governor, vis
its city.
Coast Interest centers in Oregon-Washington
game at Se
attle tomorrow.
Chinese pheasant season to
open next Monday. Deer sea
son nearly ended.
Fair,
grees.
High 83, low 50 de-
New Jersey citizens, weary i
tf lott-ll 0oii;nA in
kidnaping case.
20 YEARS AGO TODAY
October 12, 1924
(It Was Sunday)
U. S. banks complete $200,
000,000 loan to Germany.
Dirigible ZR-3 passes Azores
on flight across Atlantic.
Defenders of Shanghai throw
i down arms when generals "scll
! out" and flee to foreign quar-
ter.
Fair,
grees.
High 60, low 52 de-
Heavy frost kills last flowers
of summer, and all late vege
tables. Portland business
visit city next week.
men to
Prof. I. E. Vining praised by
Pennsylvanians for address at
Pittsburg.
34 YEARS AGO TODAY
October 12, 1910
(It Was Tuesday)
Eugene V. Debs, socialist
leader to speak in Nat Octo
ber 23.
Col. Teddy Roosevelt called
"apostle of discord" by demo
cratic nominee for governor of
New York.
Tralnload of New York bank
ers to visit city Thursday. Lo
cal pears will be placed on spe
cial train.
WEATHER
Northern California Clear
today, tonight and Friday except
cloudy along coast. Partly
cloudy over mountains of north
part. Slightly warmer interior.
The California Fruit Grow
ers Exchange estimates the
present season's crop of apples,
peaches and pears all strong
compeUto" ot California-Ari-
luiua nun? hi IL'M Ulan
154 million bushels compared
to last year's 225 million bushel
crop.
From where
Esther Curless found a trump
asleep In the hammock In her
apple orchard, and she didn't
hesitate a minute. She grabs a
rolling pin-and the last they
raw of him, the tramp was mak
ing dust tracks to the state line.
"It ain't only that I don't like
l.nines," says Ksther. " 'special
ly In wartime. It's that that par
tirular hammock Is Ned's ham.
mock and Ned's flghttn' for It
overseas !"
Then she shows us Ned's last
letter where he says: "I keep
dreaming of my hammock In the
FRIDAY NIGHT ON
Gov. John W. Brlcker of Ohio,
Republican vice presidential can
didate, who will deliver an in
formal platform speech from his
special train here Friday after
noon, will be accompanied from
Eugene by Senator Guy Cordon,
Republican candidate for con
gress. He also will be joined at
Grants Pass by Ralph Koozer
and Mrs. Bertha Coy Ross, chair
man and vice chairman of the
Jackson county Republican com
mittee. Brlcker's train will pause
briefly in this city and a largo
gathering of local voters will ba
in attendance to meet and hear
the Republican candidate.
The train will continue to Assjr.
land and California. Senator
Cordon will leave the train In
this city and be available at the
GOP headquarters, corner Fir
and Main streets at 8 p. m. for
an informal reception. All are
invited to meet Cordon at this
time. Senator Cordon will in
troduce Bricker from the rear
platform of the train at Rose
burg. Other Republican leaders In
southern Oregon who will be
aboard the GOP candidate's train
are Niel Allen, Grants Pass, state
Republican committee chairman;
Earl T. Newbry, state senator
from Jackson county; Frank
an Dyke, member of the house
of representatives. County Judge
J. B. Coleman and Mayor Clar
ence Meeker will also be aboard.
A delegation of veterans will
meet Bricker with Carl Y. Teng
wald making arrangements.
The train is scheduled to ar
rive in Medford at 5:45 p. m.
and will remain here 10 or 15
minutes according to S. P. offic
ials. IL PAY
YOUR PRICE
for your GAS BUGGY
WITHOUT GAS!
Fly in, Ride in, Fall In,
Walk in. Write in or
Phone in . . .
3919
Automobile Market
Sixth and Bartlett
LOW
WEEKLY
RATES
CRATER
HOTEL
Across From Craterian
Theatre Phone 4174
SINGLE $4.50 to $6.
OOUBLE .... $7.50 to $12
Now S I m -n a a t Inner
-spring Mattres-es Free
Showers Clean Roomsl
OLIVER
TRACTORS
o
Future orders are
now being taken for
models 60 70 - 80
tractors. We have
several coming if
you need a tractor
ORDER NOW!
AMERICAN
FRUITGROWERS, Inc.
213 So. Fir.
Phone 5214
I sit ... ly Joe Marsh. )
One Less Tramp
in Our Town
orchard, with Rags lying under
neath, and a cool glass of beer
beside me."
A soldier's picture of hornet
Th nttlr friendly pleasure that
he misses so From where I sit,
Esther's mighty right In want
ing to defend those "little
things" from all Intruders.
They're among the things oar
men look forward to murnlng
to-the things we want to keep
lnl.irt for tlicm.