Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1952)
Medford United Preu mil Uu4 Wlr 47th Year 14 Pages Heavy Frost Sunday Causes 10 Per Cent Damage to Anjous Such Sever Frost Comes Infrequently The "heavy frost" yesterday morning will reduce the Rogue valley D'Anjou pear crop by 10 per cent, according to a "rough estimate" by C. B. Cordy, county horticulturalist, this morning. Cordy said that a heavy frost like Sunday's occurs only "once every five years." The damage estimate was based on the num ber of dead and live buds on the trees, Cordy added. "There will also be some fruit russet (mark ing)," he pointed out, "but this can not be determined as to ex tent until later." The minimum temperature in the coldest spot yesterday was 24-25 degrees with a 27-degree minimum for today. Some damage will also result for peaches and apricots, Cordy said, but is undetermined. He ex plained that anjou pears can't stand as much cold as other va rieties. Cordy also reported on the wind machines used in three val ley locations in connection with the orchard heating. "Neither of the two types have been effect ive," he said, "and in tests to date satisfaction has not been forthcoming." Eden Asking Chinese Reds About Internees London (U.P.) Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden announced Monday that he is asking the Chinese Communist government for full information about 55 Western citizens, including 42 Americans, reported in jail in Red China. Eden said in Commons that he has instructed the British charge d'affairs in Peiping to deliver a note to the Communists asking details on the charges against the Westerners, the sentences imposed on them, if any, and their whereabouts and welfare. Eden said the Chinese are re ported to nave jauea live Cana dians, five Britons or citizens of (British colonies and -three Aus tralians. ' . In addition to the 42 Ameri cans jailed, he said 20 Americans are held under house arrest. Basic School Funds Arrive in County The second of two payments of state basic school support money for Jackson county school districts this year was received in the office of the county school superintendent this morning. The funds received today to taled $661,171.73. Last October the first payment of $611,188.37 was received, for a total for the 1951-52 school year of $1,272, 360.10. The money will be divided be tween the county's 26 regular school districts and the one non high school district under terms of a formula which takes into consideration such factors of pupil-days of attendance, number of teachers, transportation and other requirements. Seven MIG Fighters Downed by UN Planes Seoul, Korea (U.R) American F-86 Sabrejcts Monday shot .down seven Communist jet fight rers out of formations which jumped Allied tighter bombers methodically chopping away at key rail lines in Northwestern Korea. Six more MIGs and one "type 15" Red Jet were damaged in the day's three air battles. In one dogfight, Capt. Joseph J. Love of San Bernardino, Calif., shot down his fourth and fifth MIGs of the Korean War to be come America's 11th jet ace. United Nations' plane losses are not reported daily following engagements, but are reported periodically. Tired Queen Juliana Leaves Los Angeles Los Angeles, Calif. (U.R) A very tired appearing Queen Juliana departed for Detroit and her last U. S. stop of a 21-day good will tour Mondav aboard a Transport Service airliner. The royal party bade farewell ' to Major r leicncr oowron oi Los Angeles and other civic and fnrttian ri ianif a ric tirlm U'era host to the queen during her 46- " hour stay here. Before boarding the plane the 42-year-old monarch shook hands with each of the Los Ange les motorcycle police who paced 1 fc-.e party in a speedy tour of Southern California. She also posed for a picture with the crew of her plane. MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL 21, Telephone Walkout Ends; Pickets Off Portland (U.R) A general walkout against the Pacific Tele phone and Telegraph company in Oregon was over Monday, but a strike against the Western Electric company was still in effect. More Females Than Males in Medford, Final Census Says There were 541 more females than males in Medford at the time of the 1950 census, it was reported today by the federal census bureau. The report show ed that of the total population of 17.305, there were 8,383 males and 8,923 females. The report was a final one on "selected characteristics" of the population, taken from the de cennial count. Median Age 32.8 The city's population included 17,278 whites, 1 Negro and 26 persons of other races. The me dian age was 32.6 years, and 9.8 percent were 65 years old or more. There were 1,845 children under 5, and those 21 or over totaled 11.759. Among the 6,250 males 14 and older, 4,763 were married; among the 6,915 females of com parable age, 4,755 were married. Most of the 4,383 married cou ples, 4,285 of them, lived in their own households, while 100 shared the homes of others. There were 5,884 households with an average of 2.98 persons in each. Labor Fore Of those over 14, the labor force included 7,020, or 79.7 per cent of the males and 29.4 of .the females. Of employed workers, 16.1 per cent were angaged In manufacturing. ' Of those between 14 and 17 years, 95.1 per cent were in school, and in the 7 to 13 age group, 98.5 were in school. The median number of years . of school completed by those 25 years old or more was 12. Median income of families and unrelated individuals In 1949 was $3,271. The information on education and income was based on in quiries made of a sample of one in five of the whole population, while the other data were based on complete enumeration. Grants Pass Officers Investigating Death Grants Pass, Ore. (U.R) State police Monday were inves tigating the circumstances of the death of William Bernard Bar ton Jr., 22, grandson of W. B. Barton, retired Josephine county lumber baron, whose body was found Sunday afternoon on an embankment off the Mt. Sexton highway. Young Barton was dead along side the embankment, apparent ly thrown clear of his late model convertible which plunged 100 feet into a ravine about 12 miles north of Grants Pass. Car Leaves Highway Tire marks indicated the car had left the four-lane highway for about 300 feet after taking out a guard rail, but officers said they could not determine the cause of the mishap. Coroner Virgil Hull estimated Barton had been dead 24 hours when the body was discovered at 3 p.m. Sunday. The youth had resided here with his grandfather. His par ents, Mr. and Mrs. William Ber nard Barton Sr., live at Moun tainberg, Ark. A-Bomb Blast Tuesday Bigger Than Nagasaki Las Vegas. Nev. (U.R) The atomic bomb to be used Tuesday in "Operation Big Shot" will be more powerful than the bombs which ruined Hiroshima and Nagasaki and ended the Pacific war, Chairman Gordon Dean of the Atomic Energy commission said today. 'Liquor Commission Slates Meeting Here The 'Oregon Liquor Control commission will hold an official meeting here next Wednesday at 10 a.m., in the Jackson county court house. According to W. A. Bingham, commission adminis trator, the meeting, which will be open to the public, will be the first ever held in Medford. Salem lU.Ri Gov. Douglas McKay said Monday he will de cide early this week whether to proclaim daylight saving time in Oregon this leason. F. A. Dressier, general mana ger of PT&T in Oregon, and of ficials of the Communications Workers of America (CIO) said picket lines were removed by 6 a.m. Monday.' The general tele phone strike did not result from a contract dispute, but came aft er Western Electric employees picketed telephone company lo cations and fellow CWA mem bers refused to cross the lines. Men Slay Out Although Western Electric in stallers reached an agreement in New York over the week-end, union officials here said the men would stay off the Job until all segments of the union had reach ed an agreement. On strike were installers, salesmen, warehouse men and some other employees. Local strike director Arne Gravem said the Western Elec tric warehouse here would be picketed and added that if sales men and warehousemen did not reach agreement soon that hit and run picketing of telephone exchanges might resume. "Don't Understand" Dressier, in a statement issued after the CWA union agreed to remove its pickets, said "I still don't understand why the strike was called in Oregon." The union had charges that employees who respected picket lines were plac ed on a temporary employment basis and otherwise discriminat ed against. Pickets at the Medford office of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company were remov ed late yesterday afternoon, ac cording to J. H. Creager, mana ger. The company will reschedule ail employees who havp nnt been working regularly as soon as possible, Creager said. Morris Dismissal Probe Demanded Washington (U.R) Rep, Kenneth B. Keating demanded Monday that House investiga tors get to the bottom of the "peculiar maneuvers" which led to Newbold Morris' short-lived appointment as the administra tion's corruption-hunter. The New York Republican said former Attorney General J. Howard McGrath should be re called "at once" by the House Judiciary subcommittee inves tigating the Justice Department. He said McGrath should be asked to "clear up" his testi mony that he knew nothing about Morris' connection with profitable surplus tanker deals when he appointed the New Yorker as his special assistant to ferret out wrongdoers in gov ernment. Keating's demand was sparked by Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer's casual dis closure over a television pro gram Sunday that he asked McGrath last June to investigate surplus tanker transactions handled by Morris' law firm to see if any laws were violated. Young British Prince Steals Mother's Show Windsor... England, (U.R) The three-year-old boy who li destined to b king one day tola the show Monday when his mother. Queen Elisabeth 11, celebrated her 26th birth day by reviewing the Grena dier Guards. The queen was impeding the guardsmen In a courtyard of the ancient gray eaillo. Prince Charles was watching from a window, beating time with hit little litis when the band played. There was hush as the queen inspected the guards. The silence was broken when Charles piped up: "Hallo, Mummy!" The queen looked up and miled. The iroien faces of the guardsmen, standing at at tention, broke a little and the review proceeded. Surging Missouri Gathers Fresh Rains; New Areas Under Threat St. Joseph, Mo. (U.PJ The surging Missouri river gathered in fresh rains Monday in a flood that already spread from bluff to bluff In many places, and new areas were threatened with in undation. Express Concern The U.S. Corps of Engineers expressed concern for agricultur al levees below St. Joseph as the flood level rose above predicted crests. "If it rains any more, we're In for it," said Col. L. J. Lincoln, Kansas City district engineer, as more men and truckj were di rected to new key danger points. Tribune limited prn ml Lus4 Wlr 1952 No. 26 State Police Fire On Rioting Convicts During Escape Try Prisoners Attempt To Smash Way Out Jackson, Mich. (U.R) State troopers and guards pushed riot ing prisoners back into their cell blocks at Southern Michigan prison Monday, wounding three of the convicts who fought back. But 104 rioters holed up in the disciplinary barracks continued their siege, holding 11 guards as hostages. Jackson, Mich. (U.R) State police fired Monday on rioting inmates at Southern Michigan prison trying to smash their way into the administration building. The prisoners retreated but took six more hostages. The 2.600 rioters had carved a path of destruction toward the building, easiest avenue of es cape from the world's largest walled prison. Held at Bay State troopers already on the scene and all available prison guards manned machine guns on the roofs and in the administra tion building. They held the con victs at bay while more troopers streaked toward the prison from all sections of the state. One unit of the National Guard was put on sandby alert. Three guards and one trooper were injured, all either beaten or hit with flying bottles or buckets. Brooks issued "shoot to kill" orders to the badly out-number ed guards and state police al ready on the scene. "Stack in Rows" "We'll stack them up in rows If they come past there," said Brooks, pointing to doors about 150 feet away. The convicts, armed with meal cleavers, huge carving knives and. other weapons taken from the main kitchen, would have had the easiest avenue of escape if they had reached the adminis tration building. Hallway, N. j! (U.R) R. Wil liam Lagay,. superintendent of the riot-torn New Jersey State Prison Farm, was "very hope ful" Monday that a gang of mutinous convicts were about to surrender a barricaded dormi tory and return to their cells. Arkansas Editor Named Point 4 Head Washington (U.R) Stanley Andrews, Arkansas editor and State Department consultant, was nominated by President Tru man Monday to be chief of the Point Four program. Andrews will replace Dr. Har ry Bennett, who was killed re cently in an air crash in the Middle East. Andrews, a native of High Point, Mo., was associate editor of the Arkansas Democrat at Little Rock until July, 1949, when he joined the Agriculture Department as director of for eign agricultural relations. Since January 2 of this year, he has served as a special con sultant to Secretary of State Dean Acheson, assisting in the planning of the Point Four pro gram to assist underdeveloped friendly nations. Big Blast Set Off At Columbia Damsite The Dalles, Ore. (U.R) An other In a series of underwater explosions designed to clear the Columbia river bed for con struction of The Dalles dam was set off here Sunday. The blast charged with be tween 40 and 50 tons of dyna mite sent three columns of water, one almost 1,000 feet in height, into the air along the Washington side of the river at the damsite. Thousands of spectators lined the cliffs overlooking the river to view the spectacle set off by army engineers. The dramatic fight was at Sherman Air Force base on the Ft. Leavenworth reservation, where some 1,600 airmen and soldiers labored to protect the multi-million-dollar installation. The river stood nine feet above the level of the air base. Men, Boys Fight Flood At the same time the Missis sippi river brought men and boys, some of the latter 10 years old, to fight floodwaters at La Crosse, Wis. Officers at Sherman field were optimistic despite the odds. "We're ahead of the river and w expect to stay that way," STAB VICTIM'S CONDITION POOR Weather FORECAST: Partly clondy to night and Tuesday. Low 35 J, high Tuecday IS-7i. Tamp. HI r hut Yetterday ww Tl Lowest thli Morninf 13 Maxwell Peirce Sr. Passes Suddenly From Heart Attack Maxwell Peirce Sr., 49, died suddenly from a heart attack at his home at 37 Valley View drive early Sunday afternoon while working in his yard. Mr. Peirce, a resident of Med ford 20 years, was owner of the Medford Investment, company and had been active in a number of organizations of the commu nity. He was born March 25, 1903, at Portland, attended schools there and was graduated from Lincoln high school. In 1925, Mr. Peirce was graduated from Oregon Agri cultural college where he was a member of the track team and of Sigma Alpha Epsilon frater nity. Son Due Home In 1928 he was married to Dorothy Myers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Myers, Medford. His wife and a son. Maxwell Jr., are the only immediate sur vivors. The son was expected to arrive in Medford today from San Diego where he is in the Navy service school command as a teleman. Mr. Peirce served in the Navy from December, 1942, until the spring of 1946 and was a lieuten ant commander in air transport. He was active In the naval re serve here. A member of Albert Pike lodge No. 162, AF and AM, Mr. Peirce was also a member of the Medford consistory of the Scot tish Rite and of Hillah temple of the Shrine. He was a past pres ident of the Medford Kiwanis club, the University club and the Jackson county insurance agents' organization. Perl Funeral home has charge of funeral arrangements. Arch M. Masterson Djes in Hollywood Arch M. Masterson, 55, of 1300 Queen Anne avenue, a Medford realtor and until recently a part ner with Carl R. Beebe in the Medford Realty company, died in a North Hollywood hospital yesterday, where he had been taken a little over two weeks ago for surgery. With him at the time of his death were his wife, Edith, his two daughters, Pamela and Gail and his brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Masterson, 1001 Lozier lane. Arrangements for funeral serv ices were not given in the word received by friends here. Man KilisWife, Self After Family Quarrel Port Orchard, Wash. (U.R) A 39-year-old truck driver shot and killed his wife, wounded his father-in-law, and then killed himself after a family quarrel at their farm house south of here Saturday night. The bodies of Carol Higgin botham and his wife were found by Kitsap county sheriff's offic ers in the yard in front of their home. The father-in-law, identi fied only as- Murphy, was in serious condition in a Bremer ton hospital. Higginbotham shot his wife in the chest with a double-barreled shotgun, wounded Murphy in the shoulder, then placed the gun to his own head and blew of fthe side of his face. Murphy staggered to a neigh bor's house, where he asked assistance, and was taken to the hospital. Paris (U.R) A severe cold and sore throat kept Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower from his North Atlantic Supreme headquarters Monday for the first working day since he took over the post a year ago. they said. St. Josephs 78,588 persons live, mostly .high on the bluffs The damage expected here large ly has been done to low-lying South St. Joseph and the bot toms across the river on the Kan sas side. Skies Threaten Rain But downstream at Atchison and Ft. Leavenworth on the Kansas side of the great river, the skies frowned and threat ened to pour more water Into the greatest expanse of flood ever to drive families to the hills in Northwest Missouri and Northeast Kansas. Pirn r 7 m ft " ,.-.,- y J QUEEN COMES WEST Queen Juliana of the Netherlands and her husband. Prince Bcrnhard (center) are greeted by San Fran cisco's Mayor Elmer Robinson (right) upon their arrival at Inter national Airport. After a 36-hour visit, the royal couple enplaned for Los Angeles. Restriction of Funds For Steel Operation Gets Truman Warning Washington (U.R) President Truman warned Congress Mon day against restricting the use of federal funds ior operation of the steel mills lest it paralyze government operations in an emergency. Mr. Truman wrote Vice-Presi dent Albcn W. Barkley, express ing fear that negative legislation might lead to a steel shutdown which, in turn, would "reduce the ability, of our troops in Korea to defr-nd themselves against attack." Mr; Truman directed his criti cism against an amendment be fore the Senate to deny the use of appropriated funds for the operation of steel mills seized by the government April 8. GOP-Sponsored The amendment is Republican sponsored. Sen. Homer Ferguson (R.-Mich.) author of the measure, predicted Senate approval. But Mr. Truman said he thought that if Congress wanted to act on the steel case, it should Indicate a positive course of ac tion rather than telling him what not to do. Morse Hits Reactionaries Meanwhile, Sen. Wayne L Morse (R.-Ore.) said that some "reactionary" Republicans are trying to throw the party s weight behind the "unreasonable demands of the steel companies' for a price increase. He warned his colleagues that they may alienate the "independ ent" voters if they Identify the GOP with the "big business point of view in the current steel wage-price dispute. Morse spoke out as the Senate took up a Republican-sponsored measure designed to censure President Truman for seizing the steel industry April 8 to head off a threatened strike. Defends Seiiura Washington (U.R) Presi dent Truman Monday defended Sir Stafford Cripps Said Nearing Death Zurich, Switzerland (U.R) Sir Stafford Cripps, gravely 111 former British chancellor of the exchequer, lapsed into uncon sciousness Monday. "Sir Stafford is slowly sink ing," Dr. Dagmar Licchti, his physician, sald'in a mid-morning bulletin He has now drifted into a stale of deep and painless unconsciousness." Cripps, who will be 63 Thurs day, has been under treatment here intermittently since Novem ber, 1950, for spinal tuberculosis and another "rare and dangerous disease which never has been identified publicly. Cripps probably was the most brilliant member of the post-war Labor government of Prime Minister Clement R. Atlce, who gave him complete charge of Britain's economic and financial affairs at a time when the coun try seemed headed for bank ruptcy. Illness forced Cripps to resign from the cabinet in October, 1950. Paris (U.Ri The permanent council of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization will meet next Monday to discuss the ap pointment of a successor to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, It Was announced Monday, ij 1 his seizure of the steel Industry against congressional attacks and the administration went ahead with plans to give 650,000 work ers in the mills a pay raise. Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer, nominal mana ger of the government-held in dustry, delegated to Economic Stabilizer Roger L. Putnam the chori of drawing up recommen dation: on the size of the pay hike for the workers. A spokesman for Sawyer said Sawyer and Mr. Truman might receive Putnams recommenda tions Tuesday. Pipe Line Company Files Right of Way Property Options The Cal.-Ore. Pipe Line com pany, which is reported to be planning a pipe line from Cres cent City, Calif., to Medford for transportation of gasoline nnd other petroleum products, filed options last Friday for purchase of rights of way across 27 pieces of property in the Illinois valley in Josephine county. According to the Grants Pass Courier, no public announce ment has been made there of the company's plans but the newspaper quotes a recent story in .the Del Norte Triplicate of Crescent City to the effect that the company will seek options for a 15-foot right of way for a six-inch pipe line. Property Owners Approached The Mail Tribune learned some timo ago that property owners north of Medford had been approached by men repre senting the Cal.-Ore. Pipe Line company. Actual options have been obtnined in some instances, It was also learned, but no fil ings of such options have been made in the Jackson county clerk's office. An attempt by The Mail Trib une to learn something of the pipe line plans proved fruitless when a call to Crescent City fail ed to locale officials of the con cern, the long distance operator reporting no such company was listed there. Officials of the Cal.-Ore. Pipe Line company when contacted later by the United Press in San Frnnclsco refused any Informa tion and would neither confirm nor deny that easements were being sought for a pipe line. Data Given According to a prospectus fur nisherl one Jackson county prop erty owner contacted by the com pany representatives, the pipe line will be more than 535.000 feet in length, or approximately 101 miles. It will be buried throughout most of the distance. A right of way 15 feet In width is necessary along the route. The prospectus states that time of starting construction is not known. The Grants Pass Courier said the pipe line in designed to re duce costs of transporting gaso line from Crescent City to dis tribution centers in southern Oregon. At present a large portion of the gasoline and other petroleum products used in this area is shipped to Crescent City from California refineries by sea barge and from Crescent City inland by tank trucks, by the Oil Terminals company. Man Hospitalized In Early-Morning Brawl on Sunday Four Suspects Nabbec Near Prison in Salem The condition of Carl Blair, 36, a resident of Cabin one. Rogue Dale camp, Shady Cove, remained "poor' 'today, accord ing to Community hospital at tendants, following a severe stabbing in a brawl involving four others early Sunday morn ing. The others, who according to Blair's wife, were involved in the case were arrested in Salem at the state penitentiary yester day about noon and are being returned today by officers of the Jackson county sheriff's office, according to Sheriff Howard Gault. The men are charged with "assault with a dangerous wea pon," District Attorney Paul Haviland said, and will be ar raigned tomorrow morning. Two Have Records They are Monte Stockton, 26, Dee Stockton, Donald E. Yule, 22, and Tex Burnett. Both Yule and Monte Stockton have prior records. The latter was fined $20 for disorderly conduct on Jan. 21, 1951, and Yule was given a three-year's suspended sentence for grand larceny on April 15, 1950, according to the sheriff's office. An account of the stabbing was given to the sheriff's office by Mrs. Ruby Blair, the victim's wife. She said the men had ap peared at the Blair home earlier Saturday, accusing Blair of stealing beer. They returned about 12:30 a.m. Sunday, accord ing to Mrs. Blair, and asked Blair to step outside "for a beer" and to settle the quarrel peace ably. Fight Start! He went outside, Mrs. Blair continued, and a fight started immediately. She went to the aid of her husband who broke from the encounter and rushed Inside. His wife found him on the bed and saw he had been stabbed. A friend took Blair to the hospital. Medford city police listed the residences of all the men except Monte Stockton as the same camp In Shady Cove. The latter resides at 118 East McAndrewi road. 1 - Visit Brother When the men were apprehend ed in Salem they had gone to see Arlon Stockton at the state penitentiary who was sentenced to 4V4 years on Feb. 29, 1952 for parole violation. He is a brother of the Stocktons. Blair is unemployed at the present and had worked recently for the Flounce Rock ranch near Trail. He has several children with an infant son born last January. The sheriff's office Is investi gating the matter "thoroughly." Penalty for the assault charge is a maximum aenience or iu years, according to District At torney Haviland. way Sees Korean Truce Still 'Uncertain' Tokvn (U.R) Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway said Monday that the outlook tor a Korean armis tice is still "uncertain." The supreme United Nations commander took a dim view of ti.o nrncnprt for an earlv peace as Allied and Communist truce negotiators went through anotn er "no progress" session in Pan munjom. Ridgway surveyed the Korean war situation fro mTokyo, in a two-way conversation with Pres Idental Assistant John R. Steel man on a National Broadcasting company television program. Council To Consider More Paving Projects Pnhiin hearings on two street paving projects will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, in a council meeting continued from last week, according to Mayor diam ond L. Flynn. Projects' to be opened will be the paving of Haven street from cnmmii in Oak streets and on Peach street from Thirteenth to Dakota avenue. Tha hfnrintfs will he held lit the council chambers and other business will also be consiaerca. Stevenson Rejects Oregon Primary Vote Portland (U.R) Gov. Adlal Stevenson of Illlnoli Monday asked Oregon voleri to disre gard hn name on Oregon'! May 16 primary election ballot. Stevenson has been entered as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for president. In a letter to Tom Humphrey, editor of the editorial page of the Oregon Journal, Stevenson said he would have withdrawn his name If the law allowed it. He 1 1 ka llrai rtnt i annnuncea las candidal for president.