wircairiitt Adlvoses Vyim5i Am
B"DDU
Editor! not: A Tear ago at this
time. United Press International
distributed a remarkable gradua
tion day address to American youth
oy Will Onrant, one of the most
respected of contemporary histor
ians and philosophers. Graduation
time is at hand again and Mr.
Dnrant's words, republished here
with, are as timely today a they
were la 1958 and will be In 197S.
ByWlLLDURANT
Historian, Philosopher
(Distributed by UPI)
A task has been assigned to
me, and I propose to go
through with it as modestly
as its inherent immodesty will
permit. II now I dare to ad
dress you, i. is not as one
white with wisdom or prac
ticed in the 'vays of the world,
but as a fellow student handi
capped with senility, yet as
eager as ever to learn some
thing between every rising
and setting of the sun. You
must season my platitudes
with a grain of doubt, and
grant me 1he tolerant allow
ances that ;vouth must always
make for age.
My first request to you is
be healthy. It is mostly with
in your will. In many cases
sickness is a crime. You have
done something physiological
ly foolish, and nature is being
hard put to it to repair your
mistake. The pain is the tui
tion you pay for your in
Lstruction in living. Care of
the health should be a re
quired course, for at least an
hour each week, in every year
from kindergarten to Ph.D
Such a course would include
thorough instruction in diet
Our bodies are what we eat,
plus what our ancestors ate.
Don't let restaurants tempt
you: they are the vampires of
the stomach: they will burden
your flesh in proportion as
they liehten your purse. One
SHADY COVE-TRAIL '
Lloyd Davis Honored
m
Bt EVALYN P. WATSON
Shady Cove-Trail - Lloyd
Davis of Shady Cove was hon
ored on his birthday at a fam
ily dinner at the home of his
on-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Waltz, of Shady
Cove.
Two other sons-in-law and
daughters were present, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Weitman of
Shady Cove and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Bishop of Medford. Davis'
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Davis, Sparks,
Nev.. Joe Waltz's mother,
Mrs. Waltz, and sister, Belle
Waltr. of MuiDhv. Ore., and
friends of the family, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Silver, of Shady
Cove, also were present,
Daxis cousin, Lee McKendry,
of Illinois was a guest of Davis
arnd the Waltz's. Davta t sow
on a trip with ,Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Davis to Van Buren, Ark.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Osborne
of Eureka, Calif., visited Os
borne's ' mother, Mrs. Ellen
Osborne, of Shady Cove last
week end. "
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Boehlke
of New Westminister, British
Calumbia, were guests last
week end en route to Cali
fornia of Boehlke's sister,
Mrs. Adeline Carl, of Shady
Cove.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph McDaniel of Trail have
been Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Hunter of Pasadena, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Grow
and family7 of Shady Cove are
moving to a residence at Camp
White where Eldon is em
ployed. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Meyer of Trail are moving
into the Grow house.
Mr. and .Mrs. William
Schultz of Shady. Cove were
hosts on Saturday for a pot
luck dinner . and. pinochle
party. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Miles Williams, 'Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Strother, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Bartuss and Dr. and
Mrs. Verne Wilson, all of
Shady Cove, and Miss Ann
Forbes of San Diego, Calif.,
aunt of Mrs. Wilson and Miss
Marge Sandfort of Medford.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Bartuss of Shady Cove have
been Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Fox and daughter, May Marie
of Los Angeles.
Catechism classes ana re
ligious instruction for youth
will be held at Our Lady of
Fatima church and Parish hall
in Shady Cove from June 8
through 21 with First Com
munion Sunday being held for
the first communicants on
Sunday, June 21. All children
wishing to attend are welcome.
Smith home Saturday. Those
attending were Jackie and
Joey Hume, Willie Poitevint,
Randy Sikes, Duke Wilde and
Mary Ann Elrod and Neil
Cooper of Trail and .Larry
Smith, Gary Ayres, Delberta
Spain, Carol Smith, Sharon
Smith, Jack Darrohn, Suzi
Chubb. Bill Pfeifer, Benny
Norkl Norma Noble, all of
Shady Cove, and Ray Bitter
ling. Dewey Henderson, Dick
Hertager, Steve Geren, Don
Arnold and Tom Perdue,
Eagle Point. Entertainment
was also provided by the Per
sonalities, a singing four-some
made up of Bill Pfeifer,
Benny Nork, Duke Wilde and
Don Arnold.
.Mrs. Betty Hamilton and
family of Hilts, Calif., have
been visiting Mr.' and Mrs.
Pete Kness of Trail. ,
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Youngchild . of Shady
Cove have been their son-in-law
and daughter,' Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Vellineave and chil
dren, Joseph, Rene and Rus
sell, of Kent, Wash.
Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor
and family of Trail moved this
week end to 2252 Table Rock
rd., Medford. The new owners
of the ranch are Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Eastman and children
of Buckeye, Ariz., and East
man's brother, Jess Eastman.
Thev have purchased the
ranch from George Murphy,
Eastman's parents are also
planning to join them and live
on the ranch.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
Monday, June 1, 1959
of the cardinal errors of our
time and land is to continue
in a warm and sedentary life
the diet that once served to
provide necessary muscle and
heat. Let us keep our inners
clean. The hospitals are lit
tered with people who have
put too great strain on their
digestive organs and have al
lowed an excess of imports
over exports to disturb their
internal "economy.
Do some physical work
every day. Nature intended
thought to be a guide to ac
tion, not a substitute for it.
Thought unbalanced by action
is a disease. Cut the lawn,
clean the car, paint the house
rather than the town, help
with the dishes after the eve
ning meal. Help your wife
with her work, - and let her
help you with yours.Husband
and wife should be helpmates.
Marriage disintegrates when
it is only a. partnership in sex,
play and conspicuous expense.
SEX - r
After hunger, sex is our
strongest instinct and greatest
problem. Nature is infatuated
with continuance and dolls up
the voman with beauty and
the man with money, to lure
them into propagation; and so
it gives to us males such sen
sitivity to the charms of wom
en that. we can go quite mad
in their pursuit. Sex then be
comes a fire and flame in the
blood and burns up the whole
personality - which should be
a hierarchy and harmony of
desires. . ' '
Our civilization has unwise
ly stimulated this sexual im
pulse. Our ancestors . played
it down, knowing that it was
strong enough without prod
ding. We have blown it up
with a thousand forms of in
citation - advertisements, em
phasis and display - and have
armed it with the doctrine
that inhibition is a mistake -
whereas inhibition - the con
trol of the impulse - is the
first principle of civilization.
Don't let indoctrination deter
mine your desires.
MARRIAGE
Marriage was probably de
veloped not only for the bet
ter care of children and prop
erty, but to save us from the
tyranny of sex. In marriage
that instinct is given abund
ant freedom, but it is chan
neled within limits consist
ent with social order. But sub
mitting to marriage we can
take our minds off sex, and
become adult.
Marry as soon as you can
keep the wolf from the door.
You will be "too young to
choose wisely, but you won't
be much wiser in these mat
ters at 40. There's no fool like
an old fool in love. We par
ents should help you to get
started in wholesome married
life: help you with money, end
-if you will permit us-with
counsel. Don't let your choice
of a mate be determined by
the accident of association at
a time of physiological needs;
don't buy a grab bag in a
coma. Let at least three
months intervene between ac
quaintance and betrothal, and
between betrothal and mar
riage.
APPLEGATE VALLEY
,
Residents Are Witnesses
Mrs. Kenneth Paulson of
Shady Cove went to Caluso,
Calif., recently where she
went to get Lee Davis of Ash
land who was injured in an
accident.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Monical
and family of Shady Cove are
moving from Art Hutchison's
house to Mr. and Mrs. O. I
Williams' house.
Mr. and Mrs. Gale Friend
of Shady Cove are parents of
a girl weighing 6Vi pounds,
born May 22 at Medford Os-
teopathic hospital. The baby
is the grandchild of Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Mason of. Shady
; Cove.
, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Silver
of Trail opened their fruit
stand on the Crater Lake high
way across from the Rogue
Elk Friday Silver operated
fruit: stands' at . Phoenix and
; Talent before going into the
motel business at Big Bear
;Lake, Calif.
Mrs. Mayme Trego of Bev
ierly Hills, Calif., is a guest
' of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Miller
of Trail
-Mr. and .Mrs. Henry Rogers
and niece, Lois Rogers, with
.Mr. and Mrs. Estel Jones of
Happy Camp, Calif., went to
Milo Sunday where they at
tended graduation exercises.
; Their daughter, Arlene, was
graduated. Arlene is now
. spending a week visiting the
Jones' at Happy Camp.
- A joint birthday party hon
oring Bonnie Smith of Shady
Cove and Lane and Jan Dusen
berry of Trail was held at the
Relatives here for the fun
eral of Kenneth Paulson's
uncle, Edmund Colpitts, of
Medford. were Kenneth's
uncles and family,' Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Colpitts and Mr. and
Mrs. Shorty Colpitts of Troy,
Ore., his aunts, Mrs. Dorothy
Carlton of Newport, Wash.,
and Mrs. Ruth Wortman of
tmerpnse, , ore.
Mrs. Carrie Zahn of Los
Angeles is spending the sum
mer at her home next to her
son and daughter-in-law, Mr,
and Mrs. Ted Conway, on
Rogue River dr. A family
picnic was held on Sunday
with four generations repre
sented. The group ' went to
Happy -Camp, Calif., where
they were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jphn Reedy.
Those making the trip were
Mr. and- Mrs. Ted Conway
and Conway's mother, Mrs.
Carrie Zahn, of Shady Cove,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Reedy and
children Cheryl and Cynthia,
of Ashland. The four genera
tions represented were two
great grandmothers, Mrs,
Martha Hiatt and Mrs. Carrie
Zahn, grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Reedy and Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Conway, parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Reedy and
grandchildren, Cheryl and
Cynthia Reedy.
Mrs. Ed Learning of Shady
Cove went to Portland and
Albany where she was in a
bowling tournament. While in
Portland she visited Eds
sister, Mrs. Al Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sher
man of Minneapolis, Minn.,
have been guests of the Rev.
and Mrs. Ernest Evers of
Shady Cove. During their stay
here Mrs. Sherman was guest
soloist at the evening service
of the Trail Community
church.
The official opening of the
Rogue River Lodge under the
new management was held
May 15. Prior to the opening,
the lodge under went com
plete remodeling with the
dining room and kitchen be
ing redecorated. The banquet
room is being remodeled, and
cabins are being refurnished.
New owners are Mrs. Iola
Porterfield and Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Keefer, all formerly of
Redding. Mrs. Porterfield is
a friend of the former owner,
Mrs. Montie Gilhousen, and
By MAUDE ZIEGLER
Applegate Valley - Several
local cattlemen were called to
Yreka recently as witnesses
for Bates Lumber company of
Merlin in a $16 million dam
age suit brought against the
company by Lucian and El-
dred Cobb of Roseburg. Those
testifying from here were Guy
Watkins, Bert Harr and Lance
Offenbacher.
The Cobb, brothers claim
that an access road built three
years ago by the Bates com
pany on Elliott, creek across
the California line damaged
their JJallodil mining prop
erty: The suit has been in
progress since September, the
local men reported, and is
said to be the longest case
of its kind in Siskiyou county
court records. The, gold mine
was in operation in the 1930s
. An advance meting of the
newly appointed executive
council of Ruch Parent Teach
er association was held re
cently to plan the fall pro
gram. Attendance and mem
bership will be stressed, ac
cording to the president, Mrs
Glen Travis. Children will
make name tags for members
to wear at each meeting, and
a traveling nrize will be
awarded the room with high
est attendance.
. Committee chairmen "in
clude Mrs. R. E. Christean
and Mrs. Jim Fossen, mem
bership; Mrs. Neil Suttell,
hospitality; . Mrs. Art Goss,
health; Mrs. B. J. Hunter, re
freshment; Delbert Whitley,
ways and means: Mrs. Earl
Best, Founders" Day; Bruce
Matheny. safety: John Eek
and Robert Rametes, recrea
tion; Louis Straube, budget
and finance; Ed Ramsey, legis
lative; Mrs. Larry Tweedy,
publicity.
Jim Mitchell, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Mitchell, suf
fered a broken thumb while
has vacationed in this area for
many years.
Dale Sawyer of Shady Cove
who underwent throat sur
gery two weeks ago, is con
valescing at home', but still
has not .returned to his work
at Camp White.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Peterson
of St. Mary's, Idaho, spent
several days visiting Roy's
brother, John'. Peterson, of
Shady Cove. - ',
Mrs. Jacalvn Laneston and
children, Jolin&a and Johnny,
are living in Medford after
having moved back up here
from Sacramento,-Calif . Mrs.
Langston is the daughter of
Mrs. Carl Hanson of Shady
Cove. .
Mrs. Eva Segessenman of
Shady Cove, ? chairman for
both the American Red Cross
and Cancer Society drives, an
nounced that both funds are
short of the expected quota
and urges those who have not
sent in their contributions to
do so. .
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
win Strother of Shady Cove
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
E. A. Bauer, and family of
Eugene, Ore. Bauer's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bauer, of
Milwaukie, Wis., and Mr.
August Bauer of Copenhagen,
Denmark.
playing baseball at Jackson
ville grade school.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hall
and family, accompanied by
Byron Palmer and Fred Jones,
Jacksonville High school stu
dents, made a week end trip
to Canada recently. They trav
eled 200 miles into the Fra
zier. river country, returning
by way of eastern Oregon.
Ed Ramsay has returned to
farm duties after two weeks
of treatment for a virus eye
infection.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Travis
and sons went on a trip to
Crescent City and Brookings
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Map
ston returned Friday to their
home in Stackett, Mont., after
spending a few days here with
Mapston's brother, Henry
Mapston. . '
Mrs. Edna Sawyer is on a
10-day trip to Chehalis and
Washougal, Wash., to visit
relatives. She also will at
tend memorial services at the
new Willamette national cem
etery at Portland.
Wednesday 11 pre-school'
children visited the primary
room at Ruch for a preview
of the first grade class they
will enter this fall. Mrs. Neil
Suttell assisted the teacher,
Mrs. Ruth Granby. Prescribed
children included Datherine
Corbin, Roger Thomas, Rob
ert Baylor, Jimmy Byrne,
Shirley Cheadle, Daniel Hunt
er, Steve Suttell, Janet Brown,
Carmalita Spellman, Orlie
Hall and Sandra Thames.
Ben Schmidt of Oceanside,
Calif., has arrived to spend
the summer at the Schmidt
cottage at Squaw lake.
Rural Reflections: Elm a
Christean, putting luscious
berry and apple pies in the
morning oven, as she made
hamburgers for teen age ap
petites, was recalling happy
youthful days on a coastal
farm, where she pitched hay
in the field and mowed it
away in the barn.
Arlene Loses Punch;
No Fatalities Reported
wew Orleans -flJPD- Tropical
storm Arlene flooded high
ways, uprooted trees and
knocked down power lines
along the central Louisiana
coast Friday but lost its
punch as it moved inland.
There was no loss of life
reported, and property dam
age was relatively light. But
scores of families left their
homes for refuge in public
buildings, and heavy rains ac
companying the storm con
tributed to a wave of traffic
accidents in many parts of
the southeast.
Washington-flJPfl-Senate foes
of 63-year-old Lewi3 L. Strauss
claimed yesterday they have
the strength to block his con
firmation as secretary of commerce-by
filibuster if necessary.
Garden Sandast
McGiniy Fuel Go.
Ph. SP 3-6297
The difficulties of marriage
are far less than its rewards.
One touch of a woman's hand
can be a paradise, if the touch
is not for too much. Napoleon
said that the only happiness
he had? ever known was in
loving his children; and I hope
you won't have children with
out marriage.
CHARACTER
unaracter comes on a par
with health; intellect may
come third. The greatest task
assumed by such schools as
this is to transform egos into
gentlemen. A gentleman, as
my wife once defined it, is a
person continually consider
ate. Kind words cost so little
and are worth so much! Speak
no evil of anyone: every un
kind word will sooner or later
fly back into your face, and
make you stumble in the race
of life. De vivis, rather than
de ' mortuis, nil nisi bonum.
To speak ill of others is a dis
honest way. of praising our
selves; let us be above such
transparent egotism. If you
can't say good and encourag
ing things, say nothing. Noth
ing is often a good thing to
do, and always a clever thing
to say.
RELIGION
Religion has been along
with the family 'and the teach
er, a tutor of character. For
50,000 years or more man
lived as a hunter before he
took to tilling the soil. Prob
ably man's native character
as it is today was formed in
that hunting life. He had to be
greedy because the' food sup
ply was precarious and irreg
ular: he had to be pugnacious
A 7- i. a 1 - i
io iignt ior iooa ana maies:
he had to be easily stimulated
to reproductive ecstasy, be
cause a high birth rate seemed
desirable. What are now,
through excess,1 our major
vices, were then virtues-qualities
making for survival of
the individual or the group.
When agriculture developed,
and social organization be
came the chief tool for sur
vival, these powerful impulses
had to be restrained. They
were restrained by a moral
code transmitted through par
ental authority, family disci
pline and religious instruc
tion. That moral code, though
against the grain of the flesh,
was accepted partly through
fear of parents and very much
through belief that the code
came from an all-seeing God
who would reward every vir
tue and punish every vice. I
am not sure that civilization
could have come without such
religious sanctions of the
moral code.
Those of you who specialize
in science will find it hard to
understand religion, unless
you feel, as Newton and Vol
taire did, that the harmony
of the spheres reveals a- cos
mic mind, and unless you real
ize as Pascal and Rousseau
did, that man does not live
by intellect alone. We are
such microscopic particles in
so vast a universe that none
of us is in a position to un
derstand the world, much less
to dogmatize about it. Pascal
trembled at the thought of
man's bewildered minuteness
between the two infinites-the
immensity of the . whole and
complexity of each part.
,"These infinite spaces," he
said, "frighten me!" Let us
be careful how we pit our
pitiful generalizations against
the infinite scope, variety and
subtlety .of the world.
MONEY
Money builds an economic
basis under your life, but
don't get caught in the rat
trap of money-making as a
profession; that, too, like sex
can be a consuming fever and
brings only fitful pleasures,
no healthy happiness. Your
wife will have the responsibil
ity of stimulating you to de
velop all your creative capaci
ties, but I hope she will not
insist on your keeping up with
all the Joneses in the town.
If you become an employer,
your relation with your em
ployees will count forbore
in your Jiappiness than add
ing a zero to your wealth.
Give every employee the full
equivalent of his share in the
product. Don't live in a boast
ful and selfish luxury based
on taking more from the
world than you give.
POLITICS
Don't take politics too ser
iously. Expect to reform the
government only after you
have reformed human nature
and your own. Corruption is
natural in government be
cause it is nature in man.
Don't be frightened by the in
ternational situation; it is nor
mal; man is a competitive' ani-man,-
individually and in
groups. Peace is war by other
means. I believe that intelli
gent fear will keep us from
international suicide. Evils
usually beget their cure
through their excess; so now
the balance of terror is mak
ing for peace.
How good it is that the mili
tary competition is changing
to economic competition! Let
the better system win, or a
combination. We are witness
ing in America - a Hegelian
synthesis of capitalism and
socialism, taking the virtues
of each; and this merger, I be
lieve, will be more produc
tive of goods and happiness
than the fearful communism
of Russia or the selfish capital
ism of the not very Gay
Nineties. See, even in depres
sion time, the relative happi
ness and exuberance of the
American people, killing one
another ecstatically in the pre
cipitate pleasure of their holi
days. -INTELLECT
I take intellect for granted
in your, case; indeed, our
schools have put too much
stress on intellect, too little
on character. We have sharp
ened our wits even while
weakening our restraints. In
my youth I used to talk about
the bondage of tradition; now,
as befits- old age, I distrust
the. fetishism of novelty. We
exaggerate the value of new
ness in ideas and things. It is
so much easier to be original
and foolish than to be original
and wise. For every truth
there are a thousand possible
errors. Let us not try to ex
haust the possibilities.
. Most of you now will go to
college, and the sharpened
competition among individ
uals and nations will force you
into intellectual specialties.
The stress on science today is
so strong that college, if I
may pun a bit, will give you
only a passing acquaintance
with literature, history, phi
losophy, music and art. But
don't let yourselves be frag
mented. When your formal
educatfon is complete, give at
least two hours, a week to
rounding yourselves out with
these flowers of civilization.
Make friends with great
poets - Sophocles, Euripides,
Virgil, Dante, Chaucer, Shake
speare, Moliere, Goethe,
Bjn-on, Shelley, Keats, Whit
man. Acquaint yourselves
with the world's supreme art
-Egyptian, Indian, Greek and
Roman architecture and sculp
ture, Arabic mosques and dec
oration. The Gothic cathe
drals, Renaissance painting,
music from Bach to Rachman
inoff. Study the great states
men from Hammurabi and
Moses to Winston Churchill
and Franklin Roosevelt. Sit
for a while at the feet of great
thinkers Confucius, Socra
tes, ' Plato, Aristotle, Zeno,
Epicurus, Archimedes, Lucre
tius, Epictetus, Marcus Aure
lius, Francis Bacon, Spinoza,
Newton, Kant, Schopenhauer,
Darwin, Nietzsche, Einstein.
Enjoy great prose writers -Isaiah,
Jeremiah, the authors
of the Proverbs and the
Psalms, Demosthenes and Ci
cero, Rabelais and Montaigne,
Miltor and Swift, Voltaire
and Rousseau, Hugo and Bal
zac, Tolstoi and Dostoevski,
Emerson and Anatole France.
Follow man's , odyssey .with
great historians Herodotus,
Thucydides, Tacitus, Gibbon,
Macaulay, Guizot, Michelet,
Froude and Taine. Walk hum
bly with the great saints
Buddha, Jesus, Augustine,
Francis of Assisi, Gandhi. I
shall not hold you educated
unless you make many of
these geniuses your friends.
Cultivate them and you will
be molded by the company
you keep.
THE MOUNTING HERITAGE
These and the whole world
of knowledge, technology,
morals, manners, government,
literature, philosophy and art
are your heritage, which has
grown incredibly through the
centuries, and is so rich that
you will never be able to ab
sorb it all, to reach the bot
tom of this Fortunatus, purse
of the race. This is the patri
mony that each of us inherits
on entering civilization.
Good health to you, good
work, good fortune, good
character, good children, good
grandchildren! Drink the
brimming cup of life to the
full and to the end; and thank
God and Nature for its brac
ing trials and challenges, its
educative punishments and re
wards, its priceless gifts and
inexhaustible treasure of
beauty, wisdom, labor and
love.
Robert DeLorme, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Announces Removal of
His Office to the
Century Building
(Formerly Community Hospital)
FOR GRADUATION
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