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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 29, 1954)
MM 1M 0 Medfo United Fres Full Leased Vv 49th Year 20 Pages Congress To Get Chief's Request On January 11 Military Pay Boost : Request Due Later Augusta, Ga. (U.R) Presi dent Eisenhower decided to re submit his request to Congress for higher federal pay and high er postal rates on Jan. 11. : The chief executive also on Jan. 13 will send a special mes sage to the House and Senate asking for increased pay for the armed services, plus a number of collateral benefits. To Deal with Federal Pay The Jan. 11 message will deal primarily with a proposed pay increase for federal employees and upping the price of a three cent stamp to four cents. Air mr.il, under the Eisenhower pro gram, will jump to seven cents an ounce. - . . The postal rate increases were recommended earlier this year by, the President, " but "turned Hnwn bv Congress. The . Presi dent also vetoed a congressional proposal to raise postal salaries because there were not compen satory postal rate hikes. New Pay Structure f : Press Secretary James C. Kaggeirty, as the White House waited somewhat tensely for tews of the European defense vote today by the French Cham ber of Deputies, , disclosed that Mr, Eisenhower on Jan. 11 will recommend a new pay structure for federal employees that will cost the government about $202,000,000. , The Jan. 13 military pay raise bill also will include the ad ministration's new armed forces reserve program plus a request for a number of other benefits for servicemen and their fam ilies. T7 Precise Estimate The White House would not estimate the precise size oi tne military increase, but Hagerty the Civil Service recom mendation would, if adopted, amount to a pay hike of about 5 tier cent for federal workers, ranging from $125 on the lower Civil Service grades to a max imum of $800 a year for the top brackets. DA Asks Juvenile Court To Hear Case A motion was made today by District Attorney Walter Nunley to remand a 16-year-old defend ant in an assault and robbery case from the district court to juvenile court, according, to the district attorney s oiiice. The youth, Lyle Vernon Doty, 1125 Maple Park dr., was ar raigned Friday in district court on a charge of assault and rob bery while armed with a dan gerous weapon, and held in jau in lieu of $7,500 bail. The charge involved holding uo Wallace Stearns, Grants Pass merchant, and taking his delivery truck at gunpoint. - In the notion, Nunley stated that "... although his crime is of a serious nature, that he is markedly immature for his age and the interests of justice ,re- ouire that he be handled as a juvenile court case." Judge Rawles Moore was not in his office this morning to con sider the motion which will be followed by an order, , if ap proved. Eisioiitouir vmlm Mis, Flax Processing at Prison Be Up To Salem (U.R) Whether or not the processing of flax will con tinue as an industry at the Ore gon state penitentiary will be up tn thP 1955 Legislature to de cide. The State Board of Control met with the State Flax and Linen Board today to discuss with Warden Clarence T. Glad den and other .prison, officials the rehabilitation value of .the industry and its importance, to Oregon agriculture. : . IT MEDFO. .tGON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1954 Ttii SNOW BLANKETS CITY A blanket of white covered Medf ord 'yesterday morning, as the first sustained fall of the season fell during the early morning hours. Most of it had vanished, however, in the afternoon's above - freezing temperatures. The view above is on South Ivy st.i looking north from the Medford High school baseball field. Since rt On Outgoing Mayor D. L." Flynn will deliver a report on his three terms in office and his recom mendations for future projects at the year end council meeting Friday noon in the city hall. He said loday he has request ed . both old : and ,new . council members to be present. The mayor and Councilmen Paul Selby and Frank Runtz will be attending their last council meet ings as members. .New council- men are Fred E. Robinson, Paul Meyers and Don Hansen. Beside approving the Decem ber payroll for the city the coun cil is expected to discuss the proposed land acquisition by Fir -Ply, Inc., of city -owned Camp White property. Repre sentatives of the firm, which have announced plans for a rough plywood plant . installa tion, plan immediate construc tion in the area. Flynn will turn the mayor's gavel over to Mayor-Elect Earl Miller at the meeting s end. C-1 19 Plane Crashes; Seven Reported Dead Huntsville, Ala. (U.R) An Air Force C119 Flying Boxcar crashed into a hilly area near here today and the sheriffs of fice said at least seven of the 11 crewmen aboard were killed. Deputy Sheriff C. D. Stovall said the Highway Patrol re ported that rescuers found bodies of seven persons. He said it was also reported that two other survivors were found in jured. The deputy said witnesses re ported three parachutes were seen to blossom from the plane before it crashed. The.Weather Bureau at Birm mingham shortly before noon warned of severe thunderstorms and the possibility of tornadoes in the area where the crash oc curred. Legislature . Gladden said the peak of employment in flax comes at a time when help can be used in other jobs, and he doubted the over-all rehabilitation value of the industry. Flax" now is proc essed at the prison and sold to the Linen Thread Company, in Salem and in the East. Other linen plants have retired from the Salem area, the last to . go being , a linen, plant in . West Salem which has moved to Oak land, Calif. Mayor Will Repo His 3 Terms At Council Meeting ' fflj J. xtJ. u v -l ;-- United mWl li To -id fiir Federa Triplets, All Today to Medford Cou '.' Three tons weie born her this morning to Mr. Jam W. .Rolls. r .:- - . The first of the triplets arrived at 10:14 a.m., with the second five minutes later and the third three minutes after that. Each weighed about ZVa pounds. The three babies and Mrs. Rolls are "doing fine." according to the pleased and excited nures in the obstetrical department of Sacred Heart hospital. , . ; . The babies' father is an employee of the City Sanitary Service Co. The Rollses live at 512 Summit ave. and have been married about eight years. Their only other child, Teresa Susan, 2, died last July after taking some quinine pills by mistake. ' The tiny boys are not identical triplets, according to the attending physician. Names for them have not yet been chosen. They were born about a month ahead of schedule. The county health officer. Dr. A. Erin Merkel, said that there are' about four to eight sets of twins born in Jackson county each year, but he recalls no other triplets having been born here in many years. The two hospitals have no records of such a multiple birth in the past. Sen. Morse Predicts Minimum Wage Boost Washington . (U.R) Sen, Wayne Morse predicted today that Congress will increase the 75-cent hourly minimum wage. . The Oregon independent said he hopes the minimum will be increased to no less than $1 an hour and that the minimum wage law will be broadened to cover workers in all segments of the economy. McCarthy Raps Ike in Asia Washington U.R) Sen. Jo seph R. McCarthy credited Pres ident Eisenhower today with a "substantially .good job" on for eign policy in Europe but blam ed him for "a disastrous job in Asia." The Wisconsin Republican, who broke with the President earlier this month, told news men "our foreign policy is def initely heading, in the right di rection in Europe." But in Asia, -he said, it is heading "in the wrong direction to the. point where it could be catastrophic," . ' McCarthy's . foreign policy comments came as he laid plans for "morning, afternoon and eve ning" hearings by his investigat ing subcommittee next Monday on alleged subversion in defense plants. ,; Conciliation Service Appoints Commissioner " San Francisco U.R) The Federal Conciliation service to d a y appointed Commissioner George Hillenbrand to study the Pacificus cargo handling dispute after Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell refused a Pacific Maritime association request for intervention. - .... . . : Press FuU Leaaed Wire Price 5c No. 242 1 tfortwrs t ... Medf ord schools are now having their annual Christmas va cation, a multitude of snowmen sprang up in front yards throughout the 'city. Drivers had slippery driving conditions in the morning, but police said their extra caution paid off not a single accident was reported in Medford yesterday attributable to snow. , (Brainerd photo) Boys, Born Morse said an increase in the wage minimum would have a double-barrelled effect: 1. It would "bring necessary cost of living - relief to people with low, minimum wages." ,2.. It would, provide a "spiral ing effect" which would "ripple up" through the entire wage in structure and increase the pur chasing " power of the nation's consumers.1 : J- In addition, Morse said, an in crease would be further demon stration to the Communists of "the strength of the free world with respect to advancing the welfare of the individual.". Proposal Expected " Informed sources expect the Eisenhower . administration ' to recommend some increase in the 75-cent minimum wage base, but not to "the :$l an hour figure recommended by Morse. They expect the wage recom mendation will be accompanied by a proposal for broader cover age but not including all farm labor, workers in; retail estab lishments, domestic servants and the like who are not now cov ered. Memphis Columnist Wins Ernie Pyle Award New York U.R) Eldon Roark, the Memphis Press-Scimitar's "strolling" columnist and feature writer, was named today as winner of the $1000 Scripps Howard Ernie Pyle Memorial Fund award for 1954. : - -; Simultaneously, a gift of $4000 from the Ernie Pyle Fund to the department of journalism at the University of Denver was an nounced. The grant will be used to "bring journalism - students closer to professional : news papermen" through the estab lishment of a series of lectures by active newspapermen from all parts of the country. pie Weather FORECAST: Mostly cloudy through Thursday with scat tered light, showers tonight. . Patches of fog early Thurs day. Little temperature change. Low tonight 33. High Thursday 40. . Temp. Highest Yesterday . 38 Lowest this Morning 34 Prec. to. 4:30 a.m. Today 07 Red China, Japan Africa-Asia Parley - Bogor, Indonesia : (U.R) The leaders' of five Asiatic na tions announced today they will invite 25 other nations, includ ing Red China and Japan, to at tend an African-Asian confer ence next April. Nationalist China and Israel were the only two nations of the African-Asian area omitted from the invitation list. An official communique is sued by the premiers of the Colombo Nations said they invit ed "all countries with independ ent governments" to meet in In donesia next April. ' ' ' ' ' The communique was issued at the windup of. a two-day con ference on Asiatic problems held here s by Premiers Ali Sastroam idjojo of .Indonesia, , Jawaharlal Nehru of India, Mohammed Ali of Pakistan, Sir John Kotelaw ala of Ceylon and U Nu of Bur ma. 4 ' ; ,; "The conference will work for world peace, economic and social development of Africa and Asia and tackle such special, prob lems ' as colonialism, r racialism and national sovereignty," the communique said. '." , ,.".v Bank Robber Seized After Brief Chase -: Coolidge, Ariz. U.R) - An unarmed man robbed the Valley National bank branch office of ,$11,500 - shortly - after ; noon to day, but Coolidge police said he was arrested within a few min utes as he tried to flee on foot. Police Chief Clem J. Cruse said that, the 30-year-old man, identified as Marvin Carson White, - a' laborer, was taken into custody, by. Policeman James L. Smith at the rear ; of the bank building in an alley. The suspect offered no resistance, according to Cruse. ' . Cruse said he was told 1 the suspect walked into the bank and handed a .note 'and paper bag to teller Everett Ufford. Uf ford said " the robber kept his right hand in his pocket as if he had a gun. Cruse said later no gun was found on the suspect. An alarm was sounded as soon as the robber left the building. Cruse said all the money appar ently was recovered. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York -(U.R) Dow-Jones final stock averages: 30 indust rials 401.97 up 3.46; 20 railroads 146.23 up 0.87; J5 utilities 61.78 up' 0.35, and 65 stocks 149.57 up 1.10. Sales today were about 4,430,000 shares compared with 3,660,000 shares yesterday, Alsop Broth ers Claim American iced Book Raps Refusal To Clear Oppenheimer New York U.R) Columnists Joseph and : Stewart Alsop charged today that the Atomic Energy .Commission "dishonored and disgraced the high name of American freedom" by denying security clearance to Dr. J. Rob ert Oppenheimer. The brothers made the-charge m a book, 'We Accuse!" pub lished by Simon and Schuster, Inc. ' - ' Denied Data Access " The AEC on June' 29 voted 4 to 1 to deny Oppenheimer ac cess to restricted data on grounds he is a security risk. The ruling meant that Oppen heimer, wartime director of the laboratory at Los Alamos, N. M., that built the first atomic bomb, no longer could be employed by the government . or be i trusted with classified information.'' ; - In addition to accusing ' the AEC "in : particular and the American government in gen eral of a shocking miscarriage of justice" in the Oppenheimer case, the Alsops charged "the U. S. "insecurity system" is "in herently repugnant in its present standards and procedures to every high tradition of the American past." .. - -. .- . Traditions Forgotten : a: ; "It is an insecurity system be cause, with the laudable , and necessary aim of safeguarding our government from subver sion, we ' have . forgotten pur American traditions; , we have borrowed the methods of the enemy; : we have ' made intelli gence and originality dangerous to their possesors; and we have placed the highest premium on conformity,", the brothers wrote. . . Every witness called by the AEC was hostile to Oppen heimer in one way. or another, Every document or other piece of evidence introduced, by the AEC was intended to be. damag ing, to Oppenheimer in one way or another." " V Life Sentence The Dalles (U.R) Harry ' C Knowles, 46, was sentenced to life imprisonment today, for strangling a ranch hand near Shaniko, Ore., last October. Wasco County Circuit Judge Malcolm Wilkinson, immediate ly, -after, imposing .sentence, handed Knowles over to Sheriff Ernest Mosier and Deputy Grant Cyphers for delivery to Federal Court at Sacramento, Calif., where he is scheduled to be sen tenced tomorrow on a federal automobile theft count. ' V : . Judge Wilkinson said Knowles' life sentence on the second de gree murder charge would begin after he has served his federal sentence. Maximum, penalty on the federal count is five years. Knowles1 pleaded guilty last Friday to strangling Albert C. Stuart and burying his body in a shallow grave along U. S. Highway 30. Knowles also has pleaded guilty to stealing Stuart's car and taking it across the Oregon California border. : ' -:- 1 ? - -: Road Conditions "'' Traffic was moving with out chains over southern Ore gon mountain highways this afternoon, state police said. ; Sand has been put on roads where snow is packed, and elsewhere highways are clear. Anchorage, Alaska . (U.R) For the third day in a row An chorage thermometers dropped to a record low early yesterday with a chilly minus 28 degrees. Freedom Disar Neuberger Confident Incoming Demos Will Restore ; Chicago (U.R) Richard. L. Neuberger, Democratic senator elect from Oregon, has express er confidence that the incoming Democratic Congress "will re store the public power - pro gram." , Neuberger, first Democrat el ected to the Senate from Oregon in 40 years, told newsmen yesterday-during a visit with Adlai Stevenson that he believed "Ore gon voted as it did-Nov. 2" be cause of confidence in ' Demo cratic power policies.' " 5 Favors 'High Level' Dam , Neuberger said he would spon sor a bill, in the new congress for construction of a "high lev el" dam at Hell's Canyon, Ida., as recommended by Army En gineers.. . , . . - This would be in place of J three smaller dams proposed by Officials Express Hope : ; Soviet Will FreetYanks Washington U.R) U. S. offi cials expressed renewed hope today that Russia will' release three Americans held in Soviet prison 'camps for years. r News that the Americans are still alive was brought out of Russia byva group of Austrian prisoners who were freed. Offi cials planned to use statements by the Austrians in pressing de mands that the American trio be releaed. ; . ' ' Russia so far has never admit ted holding the Americans, iden tified as Wflliam T. Mar chuk, Brackenridge, Pa.; William A. Verdine, Starks, La, and John Hellmuth Noble, "Detroit. President Dulles In Conference on Crisis in France Augusta, Ga. (U.R) Presi dent Eisenhower held a 30-min-ute . telephone conference with Secretary. of State. John Foster Dulles today on the French cris is., I ; ' ' .:-..'; ' ' : ' ' The chief executive received latest . reports from- the Ameri can embassy in Paris on the cru cial ' European defense vote in the "French"" assembly, " : which probably will come sometime after nooh'(PST) today. ' ! The vacationWhite House an nounced that . Dulles telephoned Mr. Eisenhower and that the two talked about 30 minutes, 'r- "Now we'll just sit and wait for the: vote," White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty told reporters. . -. , In another development here today nere tne Persident , is spending his Christmas-N e w Year's holiday, the White House denied categorically a publish ed report that Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson has submitted his resignation; Hagerty said the story was "entirely without any basis of fact whatever. ' - ? $75 Fine Meted In Highway Crash - The driver in an accident case which resulted in a Bend, youth losing portions of both legs on Highway. 99, north last Nov. was found guilty yesterday in district court on a reckless driv ing charge, according to court records. James Norbert Frank, 18, Co quille, was . fined $75 and $5 costs, by Judge Rawles Moore in a trial without a jury. Frank's license; was also recommended to be suspended for 45 days by the court. " '. ' The youth had been charged in the ; complaint with : driving 60 miles an hour in a 25-mile zone and crashing into the rear of a lVfc-ton truck which was working on a new highway sec tion. As a result of the accident, Charles Henry Blackshear, 20, Bend, was severely injured in both legs. He had been riding on the rear of the truck. Blackshear returned to the Community hos pital Monday after spending a few days at his home for Christ mas. - ; Frank, a student at Oregon Technical institute, Klamath Falls, was represented by At torney Dewey Wilson. Russell DeForest, deputy district attor ney, represented the state. Gregory Peek's Wife Awarded Divorce Hollywood (U.R) Mrs. Gregory Peck won a divorce to day from the handsome actor 6n what she called "easy" test mony because. Peck gave her. a "generous" $60,000 "a year set tlement. The former Greta Konen, 42, also was granted custody of the couple's three children, their home, furnishings, a 1950 Cadil las and 50 per cent of everything owned by the couple since their marriage 12; years'ago Public Power the Idaho Power Co., Neuberger said. '' " '"V"-'' " He said he couldn't understand why Secretary of Interior Doug las McKay rejected a "high levr el" dam at Hell's Canyon while indorsing the similar Libby Dam on the Kootenay river in Mon tana. , - McKay appeared to be apply ing "political considerations to technical considerations,", Neu berger said. ' Parks Said Deteriorating ' ,,He also accused the Republi can administration of- allowing national parks to "deteriorate shamefully." . : -Neuberger, who stopped here with his wife and pet cat for a "purely social" visit with Stev enson while en route to Wash ington, hedged when asked'if he would support Stevenson for the Unhappy French Assembly Meets cision Mendes-France Stakes Life of Government ' Paris' (U.R) Opponents of German rearmament attacked theUnited States today before a torn and unhappy French Na tional assembly convened to make its most important decis ion since the end of the war. Premier Pierre Mendes- France had staked the life of his government and the 'future of West European unity on two votes of confidence in today's Assembly session , and, despite ths biggest guns of the opposi tion, he still was expected to win by a narrow margin. "' Tnrlnv'c atanlr nn Viz TTnifoJ State was a last desperate fling and brought into the action the Assembly's most venerated mem ber, 82-year-old Edouard Herriot. He called for rejection of Ger man rearmament. . -. Rightist Deputy Gen. Adolphe Aumeran," the man. whose mo tion killed the European De fense community ill-fated .pre decessor 'of ithe Western: Euro- , pean - Union, mounted his ' last bitter attack which also' includ-' ed an attack on the ' United States.-. ; " 'Are we going. to let a coun try inexperienced in foreign pol-' icy show the way to France? he demanded. . Would not Germany, ' ven ;indpr the cnnncnrckin k. United States, still remain dang erous?" .: ' " ." Then the noisy chamber hush ed to hear Herriot. , The ' old man leaned forward on his bench and told Mendes France before the silent depu ties: . ; : At the present moment you ycui ucguuaie wiui me jasi. xou are free. . Tomorrow, you will ': first have to get the agreement of Germany." .. He called for respect of the Franco-Russian 1944 friendship treaty. , , Even if Mendes-France wins today v his margin is expected, to be so narrow -that France" will be marked as an unwilling part ner to an alliance she accepted only because she feared the al ternatives more. Scientists Attack Restrictions Berkeley, Calif. U.R) Some of the nation's most prominent scientists joined today , in an anffnr offolr a. AWMAnH;.uf j t.bcivxk vix cAtcaaivc se curity, restrictions imposed by congressmen they said created a "sickness ; of suspicion" in the country. -: Dr. Warren Weaver, president of the American Association for ' the Advancement of Science, led the barrage in a speech before the powerful organization's 121st annual meeting here. He said the science profession "cannot afford to disregard the "sickness of rumor and anx iety, of suspicion and distrust and. at its worst, of fear and tragedy." .- ; . . ;. "In part this s'ckness is due to overemphasis on caution for the past rather than constructive courage . with respect to the future." : ' , ; Civil Service Group To Investigate Ouster Washington (U.R) The Senate Civil Service Committee will in vestigate the ouster by Agricul ture Secretary Ezra T. Benson of Wolf Ladejinsky as U.S. agri cultural attache in Tokyo. , H. W. .Brawley, ; minority counsel for the committee, said the investigation has been order ed by Sen. Olin D. Johnsonton (D-S.C), slated to become com mittee chairman when the Dem ocrats take control of Congress next month. - Program 1946 Democratic presidential nomination. V- He said he could not yet pick a presidential candidate for 1956 but added he and his wife were "great admirers" of Stevenson. Neuberger said he believed President Eisenhower was right and Sen. William F. Knowland, Republican majority leader from California, was wrong in the matter of Americans imprisoned hv Ken unina. Dixon-Yates Not Good Deal On the controversial Dixon Yates power contract, Neuberger said that " from my knowledge, from what I've' read, I wouldn't say it was a very good deal for the neoDle." - t , ' He said he would support Pres ident Eisenhower on extension of reciprocal trade legislation. .. r in roruique