SECTION B—PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its (1st Year” 1 °o o Member Audit Bureau of Circulations ey A Member Pemnsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association o 2 Member National Editorial Association roa Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local Eospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self - addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred positien additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢ per column inch. Classified rates Sc per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $3.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of address or new subscription to be placed en mailing list. Single ‘copies at a rate of 10c each, can be obtained every Thursday morning at following newsstands: Dallas—Berts Drug Store, Dixon’s Restaurant, Helen's Restaurant, Gosart’s Market; Shavertown—Evans Drug Store, Hall’s Drug Store; Trucksville— Gregory's Store, Trucksville Drugs; Idetown—Cave’s Store; Har- Sweet Valley—Adams veys Lake—Marie’s Store; Grocery; Lehman—Moore’s Store; Noxen—Scouten’s Store: Shawanese— Puterbaugh’s Store; Fernbrook—Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’ s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant. Editor and Publisher— HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F., BACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Circulation—DORIS MALLIN 100 Years Ago This Week...in THE CIVIL WAR (Events esgelly 100 years ago this week that led to the Civil War— sold in the language and style of today.) Naval Force Racks Up : Big Win at Gen. Butler ~ Leads 7 Ships To Raider Base WASHINGTON, D.C. — Aug. ! 25 A Union Naval force scored ‘a sharp vietory early today at Hatteras Inlet, N.C., President Lincoln was told tonight. _ Bearer of the news was the leader of the expedition, Maj. ~ Gen. Benjamin Butler, com- - mander of Northern forces at For- tress Monroe, Va. Butler came directly to the capi- %ol after the victory and reported to Navy Secretary Gideon Welles end Gustavus V. Fox, assistant secretary. The naval chiefs took the bub- bling Butler to the White House after Mr. Lincoln had retired. They ordered guards to awaken , the chief executive, who, it was reported, met the enthusiastic trio his nightshirt. : Mr. Lincoln was said to have been overjoyed at the news. As Butler related the operation, an expedition of seven ‘warships and two steamers earrying some 850 men—mostly troops of the 9th and 20th New York Infantry—had sailed two days ago from Fortress Monroe, with Flag Officer. Silas Stringham commanding the ships “and Butler the men. fin * * HATTERAS had been chosen because it was an operating base for successful Southern raiders. Protected by Forts Clark and Hat- ~ teras and strategically situated ~ on the cape that bears its name, it was the home port of the famed sidewheeler Winslow, which has been playing havoc with northern - shipping in the area, stringham’s ships, armed ~ with 1l-inch rifles, battered the smoothbore cannon instal- lations of the Confederates for three hours before the defend- ers surrendered. In the first big amphibious oper- ation of the war, Union troops went ashore to capture 715 pris- oners, 1,000 muskets, and 30 pieces of artillery. Five OCOonfederates were J killed and there was one Union fatality. Butler’s successful raid fol- lowed by only a few days Welles’ orders for intensification of the bloekade of Southern ports. > * * A CONTROVERSIAL figure sine his appointment as com- mander of Massachusetts militia, Butler was in civilian life a highly suecessful trial lawyer with a per- sonal fortune built through in- ; vestments. Hatteras GEN. BUTLER Gladdens White House He is widely reported to have impressed President Lincoln with a warning that so many Repub- licans—and so few Democrats— were being made Union officers, that the Republican party’s chances in the 1862 congressional elections were endangered. White House sources said that Butler convinced Mr. Lincoln that there would be hardly any Repub- licans left to run against the stay at-home Democrats. The president then authorized Butler to recruit 6,000 men—pre- sumably, including a goodly num- ber of Democrats—within 60 days in New England. Butler promptly filled the order. Gen. U. S. Grant Takes Command At Cairo, 111 ST. LOUIS, Mo.—Aug. 28—Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant of Galena, I1l., has been named to command of the Union forces at Cairo, Ill. The appointment was announced by aides of Maj. Gen. John Charles Fremont, commander of Union forces in the west. Grant will relieve Col. Richard J. Oglesby at the vital encamp- ment, perched on the bluffs over- looking the Mississippi. The force now numbers some 4,300 men— 3,800 of whom were ordered to Cairo by Fremont five days after his arrival in St. Louis July 25. At that time Fremont advised Washington that the Cairo detach- ment was ‘‘very sick, with fever and dysentary prevailing,” and generally malcontented fo the brink of desertion. In one of his first acts, Fremont ordered sev- eral river steamers into the port for use as hospitals. Copyright, 1961, Hegewisch News Syne dicate, Chicago 33, Ill Photo: Library of Congress. 2 Party For Han Symons "Alan Symons, Harrls $01 3 oad who ‘recently celebrated his sixty- eighth birthday enniversary, was honored et a family dinner at the home of his eon end daughter- in-law, Mr, and Mrs, Alan Symons, Jr. and family in Bloomsburg. | Attending were: Mr. and Mrs. Howard Symons, Elizabeth and Ann ySymons, Mr. and Sarda Wyman. Vo. 4 Vin Mrs. Earl Symons, Earl, Jr. and Henry Symons, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Symons, Elwood | Michele Ren’e Wallace Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Wallace, Sweet Valley, announce the birth of an eight pound daughter in Nesbitt Hospital, August 18, The new ar- rival has been named Michelle Ren’e. Mrs. Wallace is the former Beatrice of Dealers Transit Co, Allentown. Robert Ellsworth, Bertha and Elmer Ellsworth, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Sear- foss, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Evans, Kenneth and Helen Evans, the host and bostess, and the guest of honor, Morris, Mr. Wallace ig an employee |- Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post ir HAPPENED 3) YEARS Aco: A legislative act amending the State School Code required that all com- missioned superintendents be col- lege graduates and complete cer- tain approved courses in admin- istration and supervision. In ‘Stella Presbyterian Church, Forty-Fort, Miss Grace Miller, Wyo- ming married Dr. J. C. Fleming, Dallas. Kingston Township School Board named Mack and Sahm Architects to draw up plans for the new high school. Charles A. Jones, 46, former resi- dent of Dallas, died in Pittston Hosp- ital. Mrs. Ambrose Rutz, Dallas, re- ceived a compound fractured leg when she fell at Sandy Beach. Edward Ellsworth was named campaign manager for William H. Evans, candidate for recorder of deeds. Eugene Eyerman, 3, suffered a fracture to the left leg when hit by an automobile at Kunkle. Montross-Kitchen Reunion was held at Walter Kitchen Grove, Ide- town. Descendents of John and Mary Hilbert who came to America in 1836 from Bavaria, Germany held a reunion in Fernbrook Park. rr HAPPENED 2() YEARS AGO: Rev. Charles H. Frick, pastor of Huntsville Christian Church and chaplain with the 109th Field Ar- tillery at Indiantown Gap, was prom- oted from Major to Lieutenant Colonel. z Celia Price, William Landarcher, Harvey's Lake and Louis Carney, New York, were rescued from stormy waters off Harvey's Lake when their sail boat capsized. Sixty-three employees of Jim Oliv- er’s Main Street automobile dealer and garage company held their an- nual outing at Harris Park. Mrs. George Sawyer, Church Street, walked off with most of the honors at the Noxen W.S.CS. flower show. She won firsts with dahlias. gladiolii, Chinese forget-me- nots and an arrangement. Mrs. Allie Morris, Franklin Street, the oldest living person born and raised in Dallas Borough, celebrated her 77 birthday. Noxen tannery employees pre- pared for Union election. The Threat- ened! strike staved off. wernor Fine signed. a bill allowing youngsters below the legal age of five years, seven months, to enter first grade if proven ment- tally and physically capable for first grade. 3 Charles 'W. Steinhauer began promoting local [Little League for the Back Mountain. Friends and relatives of Frank E. Harvey entertained him on his sixty-fourth birthday. | Phyllis J: Borkowski, {South Bend, | Indiana, married Hanford Louis | Eckman. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baer celeb- rated their fifty-third wedding an- | niversary. Laura M. Pollock married Harold Rose in the Shavertown Methodist Church. Mills Brothers three ring circus | set up the big top om Route 415 northwest of Dallas. Frederick U. Zimmerman, 66, died | at Lehman. Second annual reunion of the Roushey family was held at the Trucksville Fire House. Robert Henderson was appointed band leader and George Lewis named mathematics teacher for Dallas Township: . Arden C. Steele, Sweet Valley, wrote after three months as an army enlistee, that life in camp was enjoyable and constructive. An ad ran: Send your soldier boy the home towr: newspaper. One dollar a year military rate; cheaper than you can wrap and mail the family’ copy. Mrs. Rachael Wycoff was reported “spry as ever’ on her 93 birthday. Mrs. Sarah Ransom, 55, passed away at her home. Mrs. Flora Ide, Idetown, born in 1874, died after a lingering illness. Clifford R. Fink was sent to Camp Lee, Petersburg, Virgina for train- ing. John Trescott, 85, was guest of honor at a family birthday dinner in his honor. rr nappENeD 1() YEARs Aco: Dickie Clark won first place for best boy handler in the Back Moun-~ tain Kennel Club Dog Show. Ginger, the Clark’s boxer, was killed by a hit and run driver several days later at Wyalusing Rocks. A letter from a native Korean boy to Mrs. Elizabeth Wallo praised her son Joseph's fine job as driver for General, Soule,Admiral Jay and General VanFleet in Korea. Three clagsrooms at Lehman-Jack- son School, located in the old gym- nasium were nearing completion. It was reported that classrooms would be crowded until completion of the shop wing and a Home Economics room. Flames from a oil ‘stove caused several hundred dollars damage to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mead, Lehman-Idetown road. The Wandell reunion was held at lop’s Grove. ar “Allie Morris celebrated her gmaven oidden | __THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1061 SHUR IRI Half of the First Forty, who rode on horseback into Wyoming Val- ley in January and February 1769, assembled in Lebanon, Conn., ac- cording to the account given by Mr. ‘William Brewster in his “His- tory of the Certified Township of Kingston”. This included three from Lebanon, four from nearby Wind- ham, about eight from eastern Con- necticut and nearby Rhode Island, and five from the southeastern part of the state. In those days, Lebanon, Settled just before 1700, was an important town in which resided a number of important families. Jonathan Trumbull, soon thereafter elected governor of Connecticut, lived in Lebanon and Mr. Brewster says his home was visited by Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, Samuel and John Adams, Lafayette, 'Rocham- beau, Sullivan, Knox, Putnam, Jay, and others in those stirring times. Trumbull was the only one of the current governors who supported the Revolution with all the resour- ces he could get. Some of the others were notorious Tories, especially the son of Benjamin governor of New Jersey. Trumbull was awake to condit- ions long before actual fighting broke out. There is posted in Leb- anon today a facsimile of a proc- lamation he issued “At Hartford the 9th day of March, in the 14th year of our Lord King George the Third, A. D. 1774” calling upon all residents of the colony to observe Wedesday the 13th of April next as a Day of Fasting and Prayer for a long list of things for which Divine guidance was needed. He was care- ful to include the health and welfare Franklin, then. ; CCE C20 C3 SR Rambling Around By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters E0030 C0 ES ESE CEE eH eT Col. John Trumbull, son of the governor, was active at the time and later is said to have designed the First Congregational (Church which stands near the Trumbull home. William Williams, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, lived in Lebanon and was a son-in- law of Governor Trumbull. The Trumbull home is now maintained by the D.AR. as a museum. The First Congregational Church was built in 1804 and destroyed in the hurricane of 1938. It was restored and is now a good example of the New England church built in brick. Near the church formerly stood Moore's Indian School, estab- lished by Eleazer Wheelock, re- moved in 1769 to Hanover, New Hampshire, where it became Dart- mouth College. Today Lebanom is a little town of about five hundred, surrounded by farms. On some of these we ob- served Brown Swiss cattle, not a common breed elsewhere. On the old village green, said to be about the same as in colonial times, there stands a wooden high school, not impressive in style, about forty feet high. A number of local residents are known to be descended from those who assembled in Lebanon, Conn. with the First Forty. The oldest that comes to mind is Mrs. Amy DeWolfe { of Rice or Mill St. She is a descen- dant of Peter Harris from East Greenwich, R. I. who may have lived in Plaingfield, Conn. He was the father of Elijah Harris who settled ‘Harris Hill” in the Carverton ‘area. Frank Jackson brought a boxful of bird nests to the Dallas Post a few days ago and lifted them gent- ly out, ranging them on the counter. “See this one?” he said, “Chances are you've never seen a two story nest.” a He inserted a finger into a rip in one side of the yellow warbler's nest in ‘the crotch of the laurel branch. “When that nest was taken down,” he said, “a man up in Nich- olson wondered why it bulged at the bottom, and he cut a flap in it with a pair of shears.” Frank demonstrated. “That yellow warbler wasn't go- ing to be sold down the river by any cowbird. When she found a cow- bird’s egg in her nest, she just wove the nest shut at that point, burying the cowbird’s egg along with an egg of her own, and hastily wove another nest right on top of the first, finishing it just before she deposited an egg in it. She laid three more eggs, and three baby warblers hatched. That's about the only way there is of licking 8 cow- bird. * Frank opened a little pill-bottle. “There's the egg the warbler left for me. It’s less than half the size of the cowbird egg.” “And here's a nest that's made to order. You hear people say that an oriole won't build except in an Birds Are A Lot Smarier Than You'd Think They Are, Says Frank Jackson Looking at T-V With GEORGE A. and EDITH ANN BURKE DOBIE GILLIS * Come this Fall, the nation’s viewers will be seeing a somewhat more mature Dobie Gil- lis. He'll be out of the Army, a student at a junior college and no longer a teenager. As the series goes into its third year, the hero of this CBS-TV show will emerge as a young man with 20 years of life behind him. : In reality Dwayne Hickman, who portrays Dobie is 27-years--old. An‘ intelligent, quick-witted and articulate young man, different in many ways from Dobie Gillis; bach- elor Dwayne is working toward a long career as a light comedian. Despite the misgivings some per- formers may have about playing the same character on a weekly show, ‘he does not believe that being typed ‘as ‘Dobie Gills will hurt him. “If you prove you have ability, you don't have to worry about being typed,” he went on “Look at Cary Grant. Wouldn't you say that he’s a type? Or Jack Lemmon. Isn’t he a type? And how about Dick Powell, who started as a mus- ical type and then went into the heavy, private-eye stuff ? ‘lI wouldn’t mind at all if I'm typed as a light comedian. Young light comedians have been few in Hollywood. Perhaps the movie per- former in that category today is Jack Lemmon.” Dwayne already has piled up an impressive list of acting credits in his native Hollywood. The younger brother of Darryl Hickman, co-star of “The Americans,” he has been an actor since he was 10 years old. Before moving into the Dobie Gil- lis series, he was featured for five years onthe Bob Cummings show, for which "he appeared in 175 episodes: Before he joined the Bob Cum- mings Show he was a full-time col- lege student, majoring in Economics. When he finally left college for a regular television job, he was only six units short of a degree. JACK PAAR’S staffers are report- edly job hunting for next year. They evidently believe that Jack will ask for his release from NBC in Janu- ary. MARTIN MILNER, co-star of ‘Route 66" can honestly say that he grew up in show business. His father was a film distributor and his mother a dancer on the Paramount Theater circuit. As a child he got his first taste of the theater as a 10-year-old in children’s plays in Seattle. And; from the moment his parents set- tled in Hollywood, it was pretty well decided that their only child would become an actor. Photo by Kozemchak Rare Picture Of A Shy Little Thrush On Its Nest elm tree, but that isn’t true. This oriole built in a basswood tree, and it used a lot of strings I cut up from lack carpet warp. See where the bird wove the strings in among the white strands?” Frank, a bird-lover from away back, was bubbling with enthusiasm about a recent trip he had taken to a bird sanctuary near Cortland, N. Y., where University of New York ornithology students can ram- ble over 6,000 acres of protected land, studying the habits of wild birds. At the northern end the Btate of New York raises wild birds in incubators. Bird-counts in that area show 250 species. Thousands of geese annually stop over on their long flights, with a count of 25,000 geese no rarity in a single season. Out in the islands of Leke Cayuga, banding of baby birds goes on in season. Pondsand dammed up streams pro- vide good nesting grounds and refuge. - Frank’s daughter, Ruth Richards, who is taking a summer course in Ornithology at New York Univer- sity for credits toward a degree, accompanied Mr. Jackson on his tour of the wild-life preserve in the Finger Lakes district, and came home with him to do intensive study on material for her term paper. ! Sudan were old * keep exact His first big break came when he "landed a part in the film “Life With Father,” but just as the movie was being completed, he suffered a polio attack. Although his recovery was complete, the recuperation slowed his career. 5 He enrolled in the theater arts department at the University of Southern California. He continued there for a year, before being in- ducted in the Army in 1952. After his discharge, it was more strug- gling, and then finally landing roles on television. 1957 was an important year for Martin Milner.: He married TV act- ress and singer Judy Jones, won an important. role in Sweet Smell of Success” and also landed a major part in “Marjorie Morningstar.” His latest movie, his first as a star is “The Private Lives. of Adam and Eve.” He plays a carefree, footloose, thrill-seeking young man on TV but in real life, he is a serious, de- voted family man whose hobby is collecting early American furniture. He and his wife and two-year-old daughter live in Sherman Oaks, Cal. WILL (SUGARFOQT) has been cut out of the “Cheyenne” cast for next season. Clint Walker and Ty Hardin will ride that range alone. BILL LEYDON - The emcee of “It Could Be You” was seriously in- jured in a hunting accident some months ago - so badly, in faet, that doctors still fear he may lose his sight in that eye. records of a nesting project, and where better a spot than on the rocky hillside at Harveys Lake, where the Jackson yard climbs steeply up the mountainside, and saplings abound to provide neces- sary privacy for a wood thrush? The nesting thrush, wide-eyed and vigilant, endured the flash of Jimmie Kozemchak's camera, cover- ing her fledglings closely as the shutter clicked. Ruth and her father are working out a schedule of baby-sitting, and by keeping close tabs on the nest, have found out something new and different. At those times when father and mother thrush are : panting from their efforts to keep the hungry mouths filled, a tiny wren watched her chance, perches on the edge of the nest, and delivers a dainty mouthful to the babies. Possibly a spinster aunt, opines Frank, thwarted in her desires to bring up a family of her own, and willing to settle for being a good foster mother to some other bird's babies. ; “Birds,” he concluded, “are a lot body knows all the answers.” HUTCHINS | 2 That he has made progress is, however, indisputable. smarter than youd think, and no- DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA | © From Pillar To Post... ‘by Hix It is a far cry from the hideous red brick high school of my youth to the beautiful modern building which will be opened to the public for inspection Friday and Saturday of this week. And a far, far cry from the little red schoolhouse, beloved of the oldsters who, forget how the pot-bellied stove scorched their faces, while drafts sifted through the rattling windows under the onslaught of the first snowstorm of the season, There is no return. Things were simpler then. Most of us are prone to view childhood through a rosy mist, because it was our own, and all things become more precious with the passage of time. While it is perfectly true that a child who genuinely desires an education can get it, in a logging camp, on a trip by sailing vessel around Cape Horn, in a one-room schoolhouse or in front of his own fireplace, studying by the light of a blazing pine knot, there is no reason in these modern times why a child should not have all the advantages that modern science can conjure up for him. Most children accept education as part of a normal span of growing up. Few of them would go out of their way or suffer in- convenience in order to get it, if left to their own devices. In what we refer to as “The good old days’ most youngsters finished elementary subjects, and going to high school was much more rare than going to college is in this generation. { There was no pressure applied unless the child came from a family which considered an education the open sesame to success, and the boy was destined for the professional field. VEL The seventy-year old man of today, who deplores the “frills” of modern education, would shudder at the thought of cranking up the Model T or enjoying the bracing benefits of outdoor plumbing in a blizzard. - There were no “frills” in education when I was a youngster. It was strictly business, first in a one-room school far out in the country, later in a red brick grammar school in Baltimore, its sunbaked brick play yard enclosed by a high plank fence, and later still, in a high school which would be considered so far sub- standard in these days that even the most lax of school boards would have thrown up its hands in despair. It was so substandard, in fact, that my parents took me out and sent me away to boarding school after the first year. _ People are still taking their children out of schools that do not prepare sufficiently for the terrific ‘competition of the Atomic Age. Editorially Speaking:.. | OUT OF THE SHADOWS Paul Valery, a poet writing many years before the disaster of June 1940, saw that France was dying: The storm has ended, yet we are still restless and full of care . .. We have only vague hopes, but clear fears . . . We are aware that the charm of life and its abundance are behind us . . . There is mo thinking man who can hope to*master this concern, or avoid the darkness, or even estimate the probable period of deep-going disturbance . . . All the found- ations of the world have been shaken . .. Something } more essential has worn out than the replaceable parts of a machine . . . What came upon the once great nation during the Second World War was merely the finalization of a decay that had begun in the preceding century. Still, those who loved France could not help but feel that one day she would move from the shadows. Such a man was Antoine de Saint Exupery, who said: . There was a time when my civilization proved its worth—when it enflamed its apostles, cast down the cruel, freed peoples enslaved—though today it can neither exalt nor convert. If what I seek is to dig down to the root of the many causes of my defeat, if my civilization is to be born anew, I must begin by recovering the animating power of my cwilization, which has become lost Today we are witnessing the search of one man for that animating spirit. To him “France is not truly her-. self save when she stands in the front row.’ That this man happens to be the President of the Fifth Republic, Charles de Gaulle, lends hope to all those who love France that the hour of rebirth is indeed at hand, For the sickness which ate away at the nation’s insides for so long was compounded by weak, inefficient, corrupt, and shortsighted political leadership. What General de Gaulle, above all else, has blokglt to his country is the echo of greatness gone and “the poet’ s vision blended in equal parts with logic and _pas- sion, “All my life,” he wrote in the first paragraph of his memoirs, “I have made for myself a certain idea of France. Emotion has inspired it as much as reason. All ~ ‘that there is in me of passion conceives France as the princess of the fairy stories or the madonna in the fres- coes, dedicated to a high and exceptional destiny.” De Gaulle, like many other great and powerful men, is an egotist. He is also an old fashioned nationalist. There can be little doubt that he looks back with longing and pride to the days of the Sun King Louis XIV when France was indisputably the strongest country in the world, or the period when all Europe trembled before Na- poleon’ s armies. Yet, this ardent nationalist has gracefully presided over the liquidation of the far-flung French Empire. | Under de Gaulle more than a dozen African states, cover- ing 3,014,317 square miles and containing seventeen mil- lion people, have been granted independence. And their names, such as Dahomey, Chad, Mauretania, and the French Congo, contribute to France a glory at least equal to Austerlitz, Verdun, and the Marne. | Whether de Gaulle can succeed in bringing France back to life is a question which can not yet be answered. | It hinges upon too many imponderables: the European settlers in Algeria, the Army, the extremists in France herself, an assassin’s bullet, and old age, for de Gaulle is seventy with failing eyesight. -, A New York Times dispatch at the time of the Army up- rising in April reported approximately ninety per cent of the country willing to go to the barricades to defend the Fifth Republic. A similar dispatch in 1958, a few months before de Gaulle came to power, found fully half the na- tion agreeable to an armed overthrow of the Fourth Re- public. No optimist, de Gaulle recognizes that his great undertaking may well end in failure. For his is the dilemma of the strong man who finds himself struggling against what appears to be the tide of history. In that extra-ordinary first paragraph of his autobiography he sees victory and defeat intermingled in the French soul: > “I have a feeling, a belief that Providence has created her (France) for perfect successes or for exemplary failures.” ; “What must then be done, President de Gaulle feels, ig to strive for mighty ends, to wrestle with and overcome inevitability. “Only great enterprises are capable of 3 balancing the ferment of anarchy our people carry within { themselves; our country, such as it is, among the others, such as they are, must, on pain of death, aim high and hold fast to the straight path.” Thus, we may well witness in France during the next few months and years the most glorious triumph or the sublimest tragedy which that storied nation has experi- enced since the time of Joan of Arc, who mandged to : weighing b both elements in her legend. ?