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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1937)
Me- The Weather Forecast: Unsettled today and tomorrow, probably with showers; not much chaiife In temperature. Temperature Highest jesterday ... , t7 Loaet yesterday ..... 34 Have the Habit People accustomed to reading the classified ads on Sunday morning do not have to be rrmlndrd. They find It pats. Those who do not have the habit qulle often miss splen (ltd opportunities. Medford Tribune Full Associated Press Full United Press Thirtv-Second Year MEDFORD. OREGON. SUNDAY, APRIL 23, 1937 No. 29. fib. wm M ti m mmm I Nfcs I ' DISAPPROVAL By 'FEf&l NEW-BORN OREGON, ,12 DRIVERS HURT jiTISIOCKION STRIKE Bmkd COMMITTEE SEEN. : LIBERALS FAVOR REAR END CRASH hrrr TURMOIL Ml MFD WBm -NO COMPROMISE S3sLR MARTIN'S DEFEAT L'-stA PACIFIC HIGHWAY li.k1!'! ll!niIT?FiVlii5- 811 ' Patrolman E. M. Ensley reported VS J "V I a" iti - win iir " . ns 1 ' I By PAVL MALLOX (Copyright. 1037, by Paul Mai Ion) WASHINGTON, April 34. The tlrst Infinitesimal feeler toward a move which might be called a compromise 2ln tne President's court D&cklne case T1 " has been made, very much off the I record. Onn nf th OD- f $ position leaders on Capitol Hill sent I word downtown to I a presidential ad vlser suggesting I that, In view of the Wagner decl- I'uul Mallon 8 Ion. it seems Justices to an already favorable court, Justices to an already favorable sourt, so how about working out something to settle the argument. The answer came back: "We would not take less than tour." The respondent did not assume to speak for the President, and no one la now assuming he consulted the President. President Roosevelt, In all conversations, private and public, has Indicated he would not compromise to the extent of the sixth eyelash on the sixth new proposed Justice. At any rate, that ended that. The only principle at Issue, of course, still ts whether the President shall get control of the court by add ing to It. This Issue csnnot be halved, by slicing the number or the new Justices. Either the President does get control, or he does not. There la nothing tangible by which to prove It, but this court dispute may end by Just going on and on un til "something" happens. The Presi dent's spokesmen In congress are In no hurry to vote: neither la the op position. Mr. R. Is going off next Tuesday tor hjs. spring . vacation, which Indicates his pulling force will be devoted mostly to tarpon for the immediate future. Even now the budget has supplant ed the court as a primary matter of congressional concern. Interest In the Judiciary committee hearings has been completely lost. Opposition leaders have always wondered why the President did not claim his victory In the Wagner case and reform his program to attain his objectives In the way pointed out by the court. The various answers to them seem to be: (1) The whole fu ture NRA program, etc.. was being worked out on the expectation of an adverse decision, and adherence to the derision would require the scrap ping of all the Inside work that had been done: (2) the Cohen -Corcoran group of advisers were so utterly sur prised by the decision that they ) doubted the genuineness of It, and still dp. Mr. Roosevelt Is having difficulty finding out who his real friends are these days. Immediately after he submitted his appeal for a hold-down budget, up Jumped the Independent-liberal -progressives who have generally sided with him, but have never Joined him and have always kept one foot in the door. They demanded a cool increase of a billion dollars In the President's relief allotment, an increase which would ruin ell his carefully laid plans. And they set out to get It. The groans of Mr. Roosevelt's treas ury watchdogs could be heard all down the mile expanse of Pennsyl vania avenue to the capttol. They know that many of the I. I. P. friends of the White House do not caro what happens to the budget or the treasury, provided that It's bad. They are Inflationists first and Roosevelt friends afterward. He Is their leader only when he la going In their direction. The movement, of course, will not succeed. In one way, it may serve the President's game indirectly by tending to counteract the really for midable movement by conservative Democrats for a curtailment in gov ernment expanses! However, such personal occurrences somenraes nave a profound effect at the WMt'j House and a reshuffle of friends s not Impossible. The Republicans must have heard something before their Congressman Tabev proposed that flat 10 per cent cut in the Agriculture and other de-pa-ttnental appropriations. Those who were listening at the vindow heard the subject first men tioned at the White House confer ence of concession si leaders on the bid?et. It was not considered very seriously t that time. or. at least, was taken under advisement, but something may develop on It. If the Republcalna have not spoiled It. A flat 10 per cent slash might work a hardship on soma depart ments. Their work would be serious ly Impaired by an arbitrary cut. A the some time, there are others which could be cut lfi per cent without material dsmace. If something can be worked out watch will give the Pres ident power to switch appropriations from department to department, with out riving him dictatorial appropri ating powers and without nullifying the concretions! r.zhi i m?ke ap- (Continued on Page AVg-il.) 1: f N on -Committal Senators Hold Power Senator Ashurst Minimizes Action Secret Meet Tuesday. WASHINGTON, April 24. (JP) Administration leaders conceded to night there Is a strong possibility. If not probability, that the Roose velt court bill will be disapproved by the senate Judiciary committee. Uncommitted senators, who hold a clear balance of power within that group, were reported trending away from the measure as it stands, al though willing to vite for compro mise modifications. Whether they will have that up portunity became increasingly un certain, because leaders of both sides of the great controversy reiterated their opposition to any compromise. Although foreseeing possible defeat in the committee, which begins ex ecutive sessions on the blU Tues day, the champions of the measure minimized the effect of such a vote on the senate as a whole. "An unfavorable committee report will be In no sense a fatal blow." said Chairman Ashurst ' (D.-Ariz.) "Everybody knew from the start that the committee was not for this bill." The bill calls for an Increase of six In the membership of the su preme court, unless Justices past 70 retire voluntarily. Compromise talk has centered upon an Increase of two or three, Instead. Legislators expressed certainty that such an amendment would, In fact, be offered by a member of the non committal group, .Senator McCarrnn (D.-Nev.) Realising that their beat chance of success lies In holding the bill to Its present form, opposition sei ators Indicated today they would vote against all such compromises. Tlie proponent of the Roosevelt 'bill said they would do likewise. The combined votes of proponents and opposition would be more than sufficient to block any such alter ation in the measure. Thus, the committee would come finally tu a vote on the bill aa it stands. Another outcome mentioned aa a possibility la a nine-to-nine tie In the committee. This would not bs sufficient, under the senate's rulee, to get the measure out of committee. Special action to do so would follow. The committee, which adjourned seven weeks of open hearings yester day, wsa in recess until Tuesday when the executive meettnga begin TIME STARTS IN 19 STATES TODAY MEW YORK, April 24. (AP) Tbls la a reminder that daylight Bating time start tomorrow In 19 etatea, paru of Canada and ten foreign countries. If you an? a strict reglmentatlonlst, get up at 2 a. m.. and make the clock read 3. , The clocks slip back again on Sep tember 26. Virtually all of New York state will be on tho advance time. Roch ester Is a holdout. New Hampshire made observance of anything but eastern standard time against the statutes, but more than a hundred of its towns plan to get around the law by the simple device of altering their work sched ules. Massachusetts hss a law making daylight saving time mandatory, and It la observed throughout the states of New Jersey. Rhode Island. Dela ware and Connecticut. Pennsylvania will observe It In 121 communities and Illinois in about the same num ber. Maine. Vermont and Indiana 1H bare the new time In a number of clues. Ohio went on eastern stand ard time In 1837 in lieu of any clock changea for the aummer. Michigan shift around between eastern and central standard times according to what seems to be best. BULLETIN Sight Game. Los Angelea 000 000 R10 4 3 Portland 300 320 00 7 13 9 Lelber, Salve on and Collins; Cr on and Cronln. fUn Francisco-Seattle, postponed: rain. SEATTLE, April 24. (AP) State Sen. Mary U. Farquharson, Seattle, was booked by police to day on a reckless driving charge and released on her own recog nisance. patrolman E. M. Ensley reported she was driving as fast as 60 miles an hour. Mrs, Farquharson denied driv ing faster than 40. "This officer stopped me and, Instead of asking who I was de manded to see my driver's li cense," said Senator Farquharson. "He said, 'You're driving like a . . , university student ." She ts the wife of a University of Washington professor.. OF VITAL DISCOVERY Preventative Of Thrombo sis, Cause of Strokes, Found In Heparin, Dr. Best Announces. By Howard Blakeslee (Associated Press Science Editor) MEMPHIS. Tenn., April 24. (AP) Dr. C. H. Best, co-dlscoverer of insulin, announced today a powerful new preparation that gives promise of being a preventive of thrombosis, the formation of blood clot which Is one of the highly1 fatal and com pletely unconquered diseases. , v One hundred human beings already have been treated, but this number ts considered too small to advance the discovery out of the "experlmen tM medicine" stage. Dr. Best told the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology. The 'new remedy Is a purified form of heparin, a substance manufac tured by the liver in man and ani mals. It tends to prevent clotting of blood. Dr. Best has purified the ord inary form of heparin with the re sult ite potency Is increased 000 to 700 times. Thrombosis takes many forma and strikes down persona of all sges. In one form, coronary thrombosis It takes lives of many men of the' ex ecutive type while they are apparent ly still in their prime. In tlie brain the clots result in what Is popularly celled a "stroke," with usually fatal results. In limbs, the clots may not be fatal but result In weeks of lllncbs and often in amputation. Heparin does not dissolve clots af ter they have formed. But It Is sn effective preventive. This gives it Im mediate possibilities because a num ber of forms of thrombosis can be predicted by physicians. DEADLOCK HALTS NEUTRALITY LAW WASHINGTON. April 24. (?; A near - deadlock between house and senate conferee threatened today to prevent enactment of permanent neutrality legislation before the pres ent law expires May 1. The permanent measure has pass ed both chambers but in different form, and legislators have been try ing to settle their differences In con ference. Informed persons said the con feres have agreed upon all of the Important issues, but are at odds an the form of their report. A deep conflict haa developed be tween Chairman PUtman (D.-Nev.), of the senate foreign relations com mlttee, and Chairman MeReynoid (D.-Tenn.). of the house foreign af fairs committee, colleagues said- WASHINOTON. April 34 AP Government estimates credited farm ers today with a cash Income gain of nearly a balf billion dollars in the first quarter of this year com pared with the similar 1939 period. The respective totals were 1.945, 000.000 and 11 .ft 20 ,000,000. The sharp climb, experts aald, was caused In part by the upward surge of general butlness c:lvlty and In part by the abnormal reactions from last summer a drought. FARMERS' INCOME FOR QUARTER UP Washington Organizer Flays , Governor Salem Man Is Keynoter Cong. Pierce Praised. PORTLAND. Ore., April 34. 7P- Howard O. Costtgan, director of the Washington Commonwealth federa tion, told the first meeting of the new Oregon Commonwealth f e deration here today that it Is the duty of lib erals to defeat Governor Charles H. Martin and all who take a position on Bonneville power similar to his. Costtgan had words of praise for Representative Walter Pierce and re buked the governor commenting on their clash on the power Issue in Washington Friday. He declared, also, that Martin Is not a true supporter of President Roosevelt. Costtgan said Washington had one of the. most progressive delegations In congress of any state. Oregon, he declared, once progressive, haa be come reactionary under Governor Martin. Speakers at the meeting assailed "big business" and urged considera tion for the worker and the farmer. The session was attended by a much larger number of delegates than spon sors bad predicted. A telegram sent by Costtgan to Representative Coffee, Washington, demanded that Harold prltchett. Van couver, B. C, president of the Wood workers' Federation, be permitted to enter the United States. Professor Stevenson Smith of the University of Oregon wss the unani mous choice for chairman. Delegates Were in fly claawsi Labor, farm, un employed and pension, youth and stu dent and miscellaneous. Each group elected members to committees. The keynote speaker was Roy R. Hewitt, Salem. He declared that the organization was designed to mass the voting strength of liberals who had been unable to vote their convictions In the past because to do so might elect the most objectionable candi date. OVERSTATE AID PORTLAND, April 24. VPj The Longs of South Dakota were con vinced today that the WPA waa out to "enrich the railroads" and -'deport citizens." How they came to that conclusion waa revealed after the family of six began picketing the Multnomah county relief office. Charles Long. 57. his wife and their four children, ranging from eight to 18 years of age, aald they came to Oregon from South Dakota In Fet niary, I93, and In November the county sent five of them back to South Dakota at a cost of I18S.71, the father refusing to go. Two days ago. the mother and four children returned here, traveling on relief money furnlahed by the South Da kota WPA. When the county refused to lint them for relief, the family huntrl up some cardboards, printed protests on them ond all began picketing the relief office. Paul D. Ross. Multnomah relief of ficer, said the family were legal real denta of Rapid City, 8. D., and all Oregon can do la send them back sgaln. LABOR SHOWDOWN E PARIS. April 34. ;p) Capital and labor lined up tonight for a show down over the social effort of Pre mier Leon Blum's peoples front gov ernment. Labor threatened a general strike If Its full demands were not met; some employers held out the possi bility of lockouts if the government acceded further to labor's requests. Leon Jouhaux, secretary of the General Confederation of Labor, an nounced union workers wera ready to "impose" demands upon the gov ernment that It devote 10. 000.000 .000 franca f444.000,000 to a public works program to relieve unempl.jy ment. M B.urn his dcjaryj he Mil ie sign rather than make such an outlay. t . Roberta Seniple. daughter ot Evangelist Aimee Semple Mc pherson, is shown as she ap peared on the witness stand in Los Angeles in her $150,000 slan der suit against Wllledd Andrews, Airs. Mcpherson's attorney. She told of vain efforts by telephone to obtain a reconciliation with her mother. AIMEE WARNED BY COURT TO CEASE FAMILY WARFARE LOS ANGELES, April 24. (UP) Still In seclusion after a collapse in court. Evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson tonight had "nothing to say" concerning a reported reconcili ation among warring membera of the Angelus tempts family, : In granting daughter Rbertn Sem ple a 200ff slander Judgment yes terday, Superior Judge Clarence Kln cald admonished members of the strife-torn family that "a repetition or continuance of the internecine warfare could result only in the eventual collapse" and disintegration of the temple. - The Judge's warning waa followed by reports that there would be a re conciliation, but so far the dove of peace has found no resting place under the spacious roof of Almce's Angelus temple. Miss Semple, pretty 2 7-year old daughter of the evangelist, won her award In a suit against Wllledd An drews, former temple attorney, after a court contest that found mother and daughter on opposite aides Ro berta had asked il 50.000 for An drews' alleged Insinuations that she blackmailed her mother. After the $2000 award, Miss Semple exulted; "I am very happy. All I wanted wps to clear my reputation." Her frizzle -haired grandmother Mrs. Minnie (Ma) Kennedy, who with Robert Is one of the temple "outs," aMd: I wouldn't care If the pU" had given a 6-cent judgment. All we wanted was vindication for Roberta." BY BOOK OF LIFE T T LONDON, Eng.. April 24. (AP) The Duke of Windsor's threatened legal action ogalnsht publishers of th book, "Coronation Commentary," caused the volume to sell like hol es kea today. Booksellers filled their windows with the book about which the duke's attorney, A. O. Allen, threatened le gal steps unless It Is withdrawn. Book shops were hard pressed to fill the demands of eager customers while the book's publishers, William Helnnemann. Ltd.. discussed with at torneys the 48-hour ultimatum deliv ered by Allen. The duke's counsel said he had given the publishers until Monday to reply. The book, dlscuwdng the brief reign of Edward VIII and his abdication, accused him of "muddling, fuddling and meddling." and referred to re ports Prime Minister Stanley Bald win had other grievances against him than tho king's determination lo marry Mrs. Wallia Warfleld Simpson. The book was written by Oeoffrey lnnls. chief of the dorument serv ice of the secretariat of the Lengue of Nations. . . Mrlkf-r Aks v.w,n DFTROIT, April 24. fVT Mrs. An na Rrnkowskl fn1 suit against Mayor Frank Courns of Detroit, po lice Commissioner Helnrlch Plckert and the Detroit police department toda?, art i iv? tvooo dsmaea for in Juries she claimed wre suffered dur ing eviction of sit-down strikers from I s cigar factory hert March 20. , V. Weddle Sustains Back Injury, L D Fox, Grants Pass. Fractured Leg In Night Accident. L. D. Fox of Grants Pass and C. V. Weddle. who resides near the Pine Cone on the Pacific highway, receiv ed painful and possibly serious in juries shortly after nine o'clock laat night when the new Bulck coupe driven by Fox crashed Into the rear end of a model A Ford pickup op erated by Weddle near the Willows road Junction with the Pacific high way a short distance north of Cen tral Point. Both cars were traveling south. Weddle was rushed to Community hospital by George Carter, county clerk, who was at the see no of the accident shortly after it happened. Hospital attendants said late last night that Weddle had a possible broken back In addition to a bad gash on his head and bruises on his body. Fox suffered a compound frac ture of the right leg. He waa taken to Grants Pass alter the crash. Investigating state police officers said that Fox claimed he was blind ed by the lights of an oncoming car and f Ailed to see the Weddle ma chine in front of him. Both men were alone In their respective cars, state police said. Both machines were bad ly damaged. MID-SOUTH AREA BBNTON, Ark., April 24. (AP) Wind, nail and electrical storms over the mid-south last night and early today killed three persons and in jured more than fifty. Damage from wind and hall waa reported in widely separated sections of Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi and Alabama. At Benton, Mayor L. B. White esti mated property loss at 940,000. Her man Zlnn, SO-year-old farmer, was killed when a tornado splintered his home. His son. Maxla Zlnn, 12, died several hours later of injuries. Lightning accompanying a hall- storm near Cullman, Ala., killed J. H. Howard, 48, a farmer. Heavy hall was reported aa larger than hens' eggs, dealt major damage and caused head Injuries to three children who required hospital attention. BEND AROUSED BY FORESTER'S TALK BEND, Ore.. April 24. (AP) The quoted remark of F. A. BUcox. chief forester of the United States, that Bend Is living "on the edge of im pending disaster" brought down the Indignation today of clvlo officials and heads of the lumber Industry. The forester's remark waa made In connection with a congressional hear ing on the proposed sustained yield program of the government for pres ervation of timber resources. Some clttrens here expressed the belief that the forester had exaggerated conditions in attempting to get con gressional approval. Operators of the city's two huge lumber mills said that while there was a potential production of 4.000,- 000 feet annually, that figure never had been attained and that produc tion waa running at less thsn half of capacity, or not .far above the gov ernment's sustained yield estimates. They said timber resources were still "vast." LAMB DEATHS CUT STATE WOOL CROP, PORTLAND, April 24. fpf Heavy death loesea of early lambs will cut the Oregon crop far below the 1930 production, principally In the west ern part of the state, the United States department of agriculture laid today. In a summary of livestock receipts, the department said totai shipments to northwest stockyards from Oregon showed 89. 6. M head of cattle In 1030 compared to 8A.2M In 1034. Ship ments of calrea totaled 11,014 last year against 11.275 the preceding year, while sheep raceif.to faii from 203.9.M In 1035 to lefl.ftM In 103. Shipments of suing Increased from 109,741 In 103S to 143,3.13. NEW YORK. April 24. (AP) It looked something like an Im promptu dress rehearsal of diorus girls on Fulton street In Brook lyn at noon today when several women sadly lacking in ordinary attire, 'rushed out of a depart ment store when a false fire alarm was given. They had been trying on dresses and quit the privacy of their rooms with only the thought of gaining safety in the comparative ly wide-open spares of the street when the shout reached their ears, Ello Ullman, 33, of Brooklyn, said by Pstrolman Edward Bren nan to be a aaleawoman at May's department store and pointed out to him as the Paul Revere of the episode, waa arrested a few minutes later. She was charged with disorderly conduct. CONVICTED LADY INSISTANT GABLE FATHEROF CHILD Film 'He-Man' Not Vindic tive Against Accuser Who Asks Blood Tests To Prove Claim. HOIiLYWOOD, April 34. (UP) Screen Idol Clark Gable paused long enough In his film love-making with Jean Harlow today to announce he bad . "no vindictive feeling toward Mra. Violet Wellst Norton, the plump English, woman who accused the ac tor of carrying on a more sincere love affair with her in England 14 years ago and of being the father of her daughter, Gwendoline. Although Gable sat in court and heard himself branded before the world as the "papa of me oheelid," be said he bora no ill feeling toward the woman and testified against her only at the request of the govern ment. The brawny star feels he was vindicated when a federal court Jury decided the woman's allegations were unfounded, and held her guilty of malt fraud. It took two hours for the twelve middle-aged jurors, who listened mirthlessly to the courtroom farce to decide Mrs. Norton violated postal Ihws when aha wrote Gable asking support for her child. She was ac quitted of an additional conspiracy charge. The Judge freed her co-defendant, Juck L. Smith, a private detective, earlier in a directed verdict, Despite the belief among the jur ors, her attorneys, and even her daughter that Gabla was not the Frank Billings who lived with her in England, the defiant Mrs. Norton cried, "H'lm Innocent of the charge. Hi still think Ouble Is the men and ttera should be blood testa to prove 't's the papa of me cheelld." Mrs. Norton faces the possibility of five years In prison and a 91000 fine unless she Is granted a new trial or probation. Her attorney will ask for both at a hearing May 3. Northern California: Unsettled Sun day and Monday; probably rain ex treme north portion and over moun tains; cooler interior or north por tion Sunday; moderate west to south west wind off the coast. Oregon : Unsettled Sunday and Monday; showers; cooler east por tion Monday; fresh to strong south shifting to west wind off the coast. Weekly outlook, far westedn stales, April 20 to May 1, Inclusive: Fair weathert preceded by light showers first of week, temperatures below nor mal, becoming warmer middle and latter part of week. PORTLAND, April 24. .VT) Storm conditions, with snow In the moun tains, were predicted for Oregon over the week-end by the weather bureau today. Warnings were being display ed at the Columbia river mouth and wlnda of gale force were expected to sweep the north coast. The general state forecast waa occasional rain. with temperatures rising In the east but dropping In the Interior. Pope Oreets Newlyweds VATICAN CITY. April 24 P) Pope Plus received 1300 newlywed couples and MOO pilgrims today, the largest number ha baa welcomed since his :llne. He extended brief greet '.. efter bcinj carried In a chair to the throne room. BY PEAMLEY New York Menaced By Freight Tie-Up Maine C.I.O. Workers Face Trial Operators Firm. LABOR AT A GLANCE (By the Associated Press) NBW YORK. Peace parley follows 48-hour truce In projected strike of 25.000 railroad workers threatening to tie tip freight movement In met ropolitan area; five Injured In claah at Long Island newspaper plant. LEWISTON. Me. Shoe manufac turers repeat refusal to deal with CIO. or to be "Intimidated" Into strike conferences: seven union lead ers ordered to trial for allegedly vio lating Injunction. RICHMOND. Calif. Ford plan evacuated; work to resume pending negotiations. STOCKTON. Calif. Scene of can nery strike riot returns to normal. PITTSBURGH. A. F.otL. account ing of defense fund demanded In cross bill to suit against aluminum workers. SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. Work ers on Parker dam atrlke for CIO rec ognition and wage booste. (By the Associated Press) Weak-end conferenrea he..n lut nltfht ISatUrdavl In New Vnrfr h.lrf the honea of railroad and untnn nr. I. clals for averting a atrlke that would crippie rreignt movement in Goth am's metropolitan area. About 39,000 members of the Brotherhood of Railway and Steam- amp clerks. Freight Handlers and Station Employes were scheduled to walk out at noon yesterday, but poat--poned action for 48 hours. A fedoral labor medlator-flrrangod pca.cepiiT"' ley immediately afterword. Eight railroads were Involved. One official att.Hhntj.ri th tpM.hi. - dispute between the brotherhood and the International Longahoremen's aa aoclatlon. A wane lncreaaa of 90 p.nt. an hmi wss smong the demands. if the conferences fall to bring accord, another neaee nm.ru.At aeen in the Doaslble annlleatlnn nf section of the railway labor act which would otier a 60 -day postponement of atrlke action nendlnv merit. tinn by the board named by the president. must oi ine nation's labor contro versies were concentrated at geo graphical extremes. Many were quiet or moving toward settlement. in Kwiston, Me. however, shoe manufacturers reiterated their de termination not to deal with the Committee for Industrial Organiza tion, commenting on a federal labor otflclal'a statement that uniena th operators sgreed to a Joint confer ence he would call a hearing on charges of Wagner act violation, 'one manufacturer aaserted they would -;be no party to conferences which have intimidation as a background." National guard troona continue- t patrol tho area as the strike, affect ing 19 factorlea, entered Its second Monday. Seven CIO leadera were ordered to trial Tuesday on chargea of violating u injunction against strike activi ties. A Ford Motn- rn ..umhi. at Richmond. Calif., seized Friday In aiv-oown striae protesting transfer woraera, waa evacuated early yesterday and a union nfrici.i the plant's 1800 employee would re sume wore Monday, pending settle ment of the dispute. Stockton, Csllf., scene of Friday's outburst of violence In which to persons were wounded, returned to normal. Only a few picketa and guards remained near tbe strike bound canneries, which owners agreed not to operate. Ten of the riot vic tims were still in hospitals, and one had only an even chance to recover. E NEW PAT.TX W T lnrfl.1 Chanta of "Peace. It'. nn.rii.l spread northward SO miles from Har. im lonigni as ratner Major J. Di vine continued to nut hia rinni n back In order. Father Divine, negro eultlat known aa "Ood" ta hla fj.lthr.tt fniin . aped up the Hudson valley from New v in m anmy maroon iimouatna today to rally alnged and frightened followers In a fire-rased "branch heaven. He first directed the transfer of 15 negro "ancel" refugees from blackened and burned 33-room build ing to new quarters In the same , vicinity. Name Bee Inspector SALEM. April S4. (ffi The atate department of agriculture announced today the employment of A. Burr Ban aa apiary inspector.