14 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Friday, Dec. 16, 1949 Eyewitness Leaves Dying City; Can Shanghai Be Revived? (Editor's Note: Fred Hampson, chief of the Associated Press staff in China, is on his way out of Red China. He sailed Dec. 9 from Shanghai and this is the full dispatch which he wrote on that day as he said goodbye to a Shanghai whose Red rulers forbade him to send news after last Oct. 6. It was relayed through Japan. Hampton is en route to Hong Kong by way of Japan). By FRED HAMPSON Aboard the Sir John Franklin in the Whangpoo River, Dec. 9 (Delayed) W) Four years ago last September I saw Shanghai for the first time from a U. S. army bomber as it circled to land at Shanghai's Kiangwan airfield. Today, with very mixed emotions, I said goodbye to Shanghai from the deck of this dioci- ade runner, whose port super structure was punctured with shell fragments by a blackading Nationalist warship. Between those two dates I don't suppose any city on earth possibly excepting Berlin has seen such tremendous up heavals. In that interlude Shang hai became the communists' biggest single conquest One is tempted to say that we left a dying city. It is certainly In bad shape and getting worse. But I have seen it mauled and looted and maladministered too many times to write it off light ly as a dying city. It is amaz lngly resilient. It may even survive Chinese, commulsm. But the trends have got to change. If things continue the way they are going now, it will be come a Chinese village housed In the dead husk of a metro polls. Shanghai was the product of Imperialism, of foreign control, of that strange encroachment called extra-territorlality. When imperialism's day was done it became a legacy the Chinese never were quite able to man age. To western eyes, it began go lng to pieces from the moment the Chinese moved In right after the war In 1945 and took it over. During the last six months under the communists, it has changed character again. Today It is crowded with com missars, big and little, who are devoted to an Ideal that doesn't seem to fit Shanghai and who are, In the main, high-minded and honest and incredibly in efficient. Without attempting to go in to details on the question whether communism can suc ceed in a city like Shanghai, it till seems to me Shanghai represented a high water mark of modernity in China. Shanghai is now being sacri ficed. This product of the west, which helped pull China out of Its ancient feudalism and demon- I slraled what western methods could do, has been vilified by the communists because of 11 s imperlist background and be cause It depends on "imperialist trade." There seems to be no dispo sition by the new authorities to examine and .ascertain just what services the greatest of the treaty ports performed for China. But only to look at the evils attendant on its growth. The saddest phase of this fare well to Shanghai was wrapped up in a small group of Chinese who saw us to the ship with their brave bouquets of flowers for the departing foreigners de spite the glowering disapproval of communist guards. This group of Chinese seemed to me to represent the beginning of "a solid middle class in China which could have grown and brought greatness to China. They were the product of Shang hai. They had absorbed the best of the west and mixed it com patibly with their oriental natures. They had modest but good homes. Their children were In school. They had learned pro fessions and trades. They could earn enough at them to main tain themselves with pride and decency. And they had done it on their own no kin ties with the rich, no political connection, no special privilege except their own abilities. Ia -ft it 1 ,1 i Y Trapped MicKey honoway, 2-years-old shows how he was making a face at his sister, Shirley, when he got his head caught in a banister. Birm ingham, Ala. firemen releas ed him with the judicious use of a crowbar. He told photog raphers he wasn't scared, but kept his head a respectable dis tance from the banister. (AP wirephoto) and Pan and Chen. For the last four years they worked for the Asociated Press in Shanghai Now they are out of work. The gates of their professions and trades are closed unless they can somehow get into the party machine and wear grotesque cotton uniforms, send their kids to the "correct" schools and live on a few dollars a month and a regimented rice allowance. At present they are living on severance pay which can last only a few months at best I guess they are the despised bourgeois who must be crushed down to become part of that vague horde the proletariat above which one is not supposed to want to rise. These are to be destroyed. A millenium has arrived. Its record so far in Shanghai city normally of 6,000,000 Inhnhifnnfc ie 1 OHO nnn nnnm. They were Koo and Tsang ployed. WET WINDOWS? Storm sash reduces mois ture condensation on win dows to a remarkable de gree, for most cases elim inating condensation en tirely. Saves fuel, too! With our new low prices you cannot afford to be without them. SALEM WOODWORKING CO. 1225 Cross Cabinets . Frames Ph. 3-5953 rail 1 nn'BI 1 I I5aslv ourt Hears Star Spangled . Banner Made in Brewery Annapolis, Md., Dec. 16 Wj Was the Star Spangled Banner made in a brewery? Maryland's court of appeals heard this version of history Wed nesday in a dispute over the Star Spangled Banner Flag House in Baltimore. It was there that Mary Pick ersgill made the flag that flew over Fort McHenry in 1813 and inspired Francis Scott Key's na tional anthem, historians gener ally believe. She completed the huge ban ner in the roomier confines of a nearby brewery, argued lawyers for one side in a lawsuit. This was denied by the Star Spangled Banner Flag House as sociation, which said the flag was completed in a warehouse. The state's highest court heard arguments in a condemnation suit by which the city of Balti more seeks to take over a three- story red-brick rooming house next door to the flag house, now operated by the association as a public shrine. The property would be con verted into office space for the flag association as part of a plan to create a memorial square as "an inspiration" to patriotism. "Into dates and history will be instilled a soul," said city so licitor Thomas N. Biddison. Attorneys for Annie Flacco- mio, owner, of the rooming house, said the city has no right to take over the property. Attorneys Hyman Ginsberg and Louis R. Milio cast doubt on the history of the flag house it self by stating it was "supposed ly" the house where Mary Pickersgill made the flag which "is reputed" to have inspired Key. They quoted a Maryland guidebook as stating that the flag was finished in a brewery. "It could, of course be argued that the brewery in which the flag was finally completed is en titled to as much glory as the so called flag house," they said. Biddison quoted a flag asso elation statement that the flag was so large "that it became ne cessary to obtain permission to spread the materials out on the large floor of a neighboring warehouse for cutting and sew ing." Ginsberg and Milio gave the size of the banner as 42 by 30 feet. Biddison said it was 29 by 36 feet. All agreed it had 15 stripes and 15 stars. At any rate, the owner's at torneys argued, the house next door, "all hands admit, had nothing to do with the Star Spangled Banner." "One does not cease to be pa troitic in every sense of that word, nor does he stop loving his country or the flag of that country," by objecting to the loss of the rooming house, they said. The court took the case under advisement. Saint Paul to Present Pageant The annual Christmas pageant of the Saint Paul's Episcopal Sunday school will be present ed Sunday at 5 p. m. The pag eant, under the leadership of Miss Jean Quickcnden, will be held in the church. A cordial in vitation is' extended to parents and friends. Following the pag eant the Christmas party with a Santa Claus and tree will be presented in the parish house. Polk Club Leaders Called to Dallas Dallas The Polk county 4-H local leaders association will meet Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in the county court house in Dal las, announces Stan Fansher, SHIRK MASTER HOSIERY MENDER Automatic, uses no thread. Easy to operate. Mends any hose or lingerie. Guaran teed. The needle that is used by professional menders. ONLY JSC Fred Meyer 148 N. Liberty Relieve distress . almost instantly I ne sure to use . . J No Jokers Just a Good Deal for YOU at DODGE STAN BAKER MOTORS High and Chemeketa Polk county extension agent. There will be a discussion of the plans for the coming year and a question box pertaining to the organization of new and old 4-H clubs for the coming year. All local 4-H leaders, their husbands or wives, and other in terested persons are welcome to attend this meeting. Vested Choir Appears Silverton The second in the series of Evening Choral pro grams at the First Christian church is to be given Sunday, December 18, beginning at 8 o'clock, by the vested choir of ' 30 voices directed by Mrs. Frances Willard-Plnvhart as a pre-Christmas observance at the church. mean! what a shave! GIFTS F But yes, choose Mais Oui for holiday givingi Mais Oui Perfume, exquisite fragrance in sparkling crystal ... or a colorful, captivating gift package filled with matching accessories to charm. 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Fred and Bernlce Camp of Stayton, who met as wheelchair members of the Chin-Up Club, have established a thriving Oregon business, despite their physical handicaps. Eight years ago Fred began tying trout fishing flies. Today the Camps operate the Camp Tackle Co., with Stayton and Portland shops serving America's sports fishermen. The firm, employing more than a dozen persons, catalogues 400 varieties of flies and 25 of spinners. Both Fred, who is Stayton's Chamber of Commerce president, and Bernice are enthusiastic over cooperation they've received from the Stayton Branch of the First National Bank. O MEAT IS THEIR DISH. As an Eastern Oregon livestock marketer, Samuel E. Hill saw the need for a wholesale meat service in Pendleton. Three years ago he purchased a small "custom" slaughterhouse, serving only the individual needs of owners of hogs, cattle and lambs. With the help of his wife and son, Clinton J. Hill (now a New York art student), Hill extended the business by providing fresh and cured meats for nearby markets and restaurants. Now the Hill Meat Co. is in enlarged quarters and provides seven non-family jobs. The firm continues to advance its growth through helpful services of the Pendleton Branch of First National PROVIDES BOX TOPS; BOTTOMS, TOO. Louis Rupp decided in 1945 that Hood River apple and pear orchards needed a dose-at-hand veneer plant to furnish slatted tops and bottoms for fruit boxes. Assistance from First National at Hood River enabled him to start the Hood River Box & Veneer Co. at Odctl. The plant is near both the orchards and supplies of pine and fir logs for peeling." Today it provides 2 1 Oregon jobs directly. Use of a 64-inch lathe and other modern equipment produces 5,000.000 pliable "lids" annually for boxes with sides and ends of regularly cut lumber. he persons you meet here have the kind of vision and Initiative on which Oregon's prosperity is based. They have taken widely different means of bettering themselves but in each case they have Increased our state's income, created new jobs and added opportunities for all of us. To help indi viduals help themselves and, thus, build Oregon family by family, farm by farm and business by business banks in the First National Group make their constructive services widely available. Come in and let us know how we can help you. SALEM BRANCH NATIONAL BANK NOW. ..ALL-DAY BANKING IO TO 5, MONDAY thru SATURDAY. OF PORTLAND MIMIII MDIIAl BIPOIIT INSUIANCI COIPOIATION -