« 4» VOL; 3a—NO. 35 SIXTEEN PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1959 SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE; 10 CENTS Berserk Policenian Killed In Hospital After Holding Woman As Hostage Ralph E. Medlin, 26-year-old policeman who had served ex actly seven weeks on the local force, was killed in a corridor of Moore Memorial Hospital Mon day night after he had gone ber serk and tried, in the short space of 55 minutes, to kill at least a half dozen people. The shot that felled Medlin was fired by Pinehurst police officer Rudolph Frye as they stood outside the room of Mrs. Dorothy Clippard of Southern Pines, one of those whom Medlin had fired at in his wild and rampaging romp that still has his fellow of ficers baffled. An official inquest that had been called by Coroner Ralph Steed for tonight (Thursday) has been postponed until next week. Steed said, to allow him time to secure more information. Medlin, described after the shooting by Chief C. E. Newton as “a man who appesired to me to be an excellent officer,” was in an automobile accident in Philadelphia several months ago. his brothers told local officers Tuesday, and had sustained a head injury. That, plus what sev eral of his acquaintances have said was “an insane jealousy of Mrs. Clippeird,” were thought to be the reasons he went on his wild spree Monday night. Before it was over he had fired at least eight shots at people, sev eral of whom he had never seen before. At one point he tried to kill his roommate who was at tempting to restrain him, and fired wildly at Mrs. Clippard in her room as officers grimly closed in to take him dead or alive. Movements Traced Chief Newton traced Medlin’s movements from the time he (Medlin) was relieved from his 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift Sunday night to the moment he was kill ed. He was at Joe’s Grill from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m., and then apparent ly went to his rooms in, an up stairs apartment at Mrsl Clip- pard’s home on N. Ashe Street. He .roomed there with Wesley Thompson, another member of the police force. Shortly before 8 o’clock Mon day night Medlin was at a tavern on N. May Street operated by Robert Yonts, a former member of the force. He had a beer, Yonts recalled to Chief Newton, then asked if he could borrow Yont’s car. He wanted it, he said, so that he could go to Moore Memorial Hospital to visit Mrs. Clippard, who had been there about 10 days at the time with a back ail ment. Yonts loaned him the car, a 1959 Ford, and Medlin then went to Earl Walker’s house just off Highway 22 in the Knollwood area. Walker, aji employee of CP&L, and Medlin had grown up in Apex. Threatens Friend When Medlin arrived at the Walker home he called Walker outside and told hirn he was in trouble. “I’ve stolen a car,” he told Walker. He also said that if anyone in Walker’s house called police “he would kill Walker.” Inside Walker’s Jiouse were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wilson, friends of theirs. Wilson recently joined the police department and, like Walker and Medlin, grew up in Apex. As Walker related the story to The Pilot, Medlin told him that he (Medlin) wanted to go to Ra leigh “to kill his wife” and want ed Walker to go with him.' (Med lin lived in Raleigh before com ing here and had been divorced from his wife, who has since re married.) Medlin, known by Chief Ne'wtqn to have had family dif ficulties, told Walker “he had to get her.” Walker declined and tried to talk Medlin out of either going to Raleigh or doing anything else. He urged him to go into the house and cahn down. Medlin went into the house a few minutes, talked with the two couples and reiterated his threat to kill Walker if anyone called the police. The two went back outside and got in the car and contin ued talking for a few minutes'. Then Medlin saw Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Wilson going towards (Continued on page 8) BULLET HOLE in the windshield of a pick up truck that Ralph Medlin tried to comman deer on his mad dash to Moore Memorial Hos pital is pointed opt by Leavern Maness, owner of the truck and the peirson Medlin was firing at. At bottom 16ft is the grill across from the station wl}ere Mrs. Maness was first approached by Medlin looking for a car, and at bottom right is the car he was driving, showing the dent on the side made when he sideswiped a tree on Midland Road. Medlin drove the car to the hos pital with a flat tire, leaving a trail of chewed rubber scattered aU along Midland Road. The car had bet-i borrowed less than an hour before. Carthage Youth Is County’s Seventh Road Death Of ’59 Killed When Car Overturned Near Carthage Friday David Wilton Powers, 16, of Carthage, was killed Friday night at about 11:10 when the 1957 Pontiac in which he was riding left the highway two-and-a-half miles east of Carthage. He was Moore County’s sev enth highway fatality for 1959. A second passenger in the car, James Michael, 18, also of Car thage, was taken to Moore Mem orial Hospital suffering severe lacerations, head injuries and possible internal injuries. The car was reported a total loss after it left the Union Church Road. It went out of control, hit the right side of the road and left the shoulder to tumble down a slight embankment and over turn at the bottom according to State Highway Patrolman H. A. Hight, investigating officer. ’The car was found some 20 feet from the highway on the curve. Patrolman Hight said, adding that the curve was not considered too hazardous. Funeral rites for Powers were held Simday afternoon at the Cool Springs Methodist Church near Glendon with Rev. Jeffer son Davis, pastor of the church conducting. Burial took place in the ohurch cemetery. Powers is survived by his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Wilton Powers; two brothers, Howard Reginald and Wayne, both of the home; and his paternal grand, mother, Mrs. J. A. Powers of Route 1, Carthjage. FEW DETAILS KNOWN Mt. Pleasant Man New School Superintendent LUTHER A. ADAMS ' ' ' Hi. * ' r JAMES E, WALSER To Nurse Youngblood: A Bouquet ^nd Constable Accidentally RALPH E. MEDLIN 1 Hospital Officials Commend Staff’s ‘Splendid Conduct’ Members of the staffs of every newspaper in Moore County plus personnel of 'radio station WEEB were invited to Moore Memorial Hospital Tuesday afternoon to hear a detailed account of the events of the night before when Ralph Medlin, Southern Pines po liceman, went berserk and terror ized the pediatrics wing for about 10 minutes. John Taylor, chairman of the Board of Directors, Thomas Howerton, the hospital adminis trator, and Mrs. Emily Yoimg- blood, who was the supervisor of nurses at the time of the incident, were questioned closely as were several other nurses and hospi tal employees who had witnessed any part of the events. Howerton said later that he was “more than pleased wth the splendid way our personnel hand led the matter and the way they conducted themselves. All of them are to be commended for their efforts to protect and com fort their patients and, soeaking for the rest of the staff, I hereby express our gratitude and humble thanks. "What they did was in the best spirit of the nursing profes sion.” Mr. Taylor said that in his memory no other incident had happened at the hospital that had (Continued on page 8) Mrs. Emily Youngblood, night supervisor of nurses at Moore Memorial Hospital, is what any person would call an ideal nurse. Efficient, dedicated, extremely capable, attractive enough to be a fashion model, and she’s cool and calm in an emergency. That last attribute, her associ ates said Tuesday, probably ac counts lor the fact that not one single person was harmed when a rampaging policeman went ber serk at the hospital Monday night and kept a whole wing terrorized for several agonizing minutes. Here’s what she did: when sbs heard that Ralph Medlin was holding a woman patient in her room at gunpoint and threatened to shoot other people, she went into the room i-n an effort to free the patient, Mrs. Dorothy Clip pard. Hit sharply on the arm and sent almost sprawling across the hospital corridor, she got up, re strained two other nurses from enterng the room, and set about finding some other way to bring order back to her domain. It was she who snatched Po liceman 'Wesley Thompson into a bathroom, pulling him from the line of Medlines fire. 'While huddling in the bath room worrying about her pa tients, she remembered that W. O. Spence of Southern Pines was di rectly across the hall suffering the effects of a heart attack. She dashed across, got him back in the bed and made him comfort able. A minute or two later Medlin was killed by bullets from anoth er policeman’s gim. Almost as soon as he hit the floor Mrs. Youngblood was there feeling for a pulse, trying to the very end to give comfort to someone who could’t use it. When she learned that Medlin was definitely dead, she hurried down the hall, looking into all rooms and asking about her pa tients. One grandmother, she discov ered, had wrapped a youngster in a blanket and was huddling un-1 der a bed. Another patient, a teenager, had heard all the commotion, locked himelf in the bathroom. 'When Mrs. Youngblood arrived in the room, the youngster was back in his bed watching television. No need to worry there. She called the Hospital Admin istrator’s house: “Let me speak to Dr. Howerton,” she said. (Hower ton, no doctor, thanked her next day for the compliment. He ask ed her again, too, if she wouldn’t stay on at the hospital instead of following with her plans to go away for study in order to be come an anesthetist.) A reporter managed to get her stopped long eough Tuesday afternoon to ask her reaction to all the excitement. “We really had it, didn’t we?” she said, bustling off down the hall to look after her patients. Kills Boy Near Robbins Early Today Harold Jean Sheffield, 17, of Route 1, Eagle Springs, Was found dead early this morning on Highway 27 about three miles west of the Robbins crossroads. Sheffeld had been struck by an automoble driven by Constable Oscar Bailey of West End, who told State Highway Patrolmen Jm McCohnan and Thomas Clark that he did not see the boy ly ing in the road until it was too late to stop. The accident occur red about 3:30 a. m. A full investigation will be conducted by the Patrol and Cor-- oner Ralph Steed. Steed said ths morning that he had not questioned Bailey at length. Cpl. McColman was out of town and unavailable for com ment. Gen. Marshall Is Annual Poultry Day Slated For Highfalls Gym The annual Highfalls Poultry Show will be held at the High falls school Saturday, August 22, Reported Still according to Harold Purvis, the chairman. Purvis, who lives on Route 1, Robbins, named the following of ficers and committees: Mrs. Nor ris Shields, Route 1, Robbins, vice-president; Miss Lucy Rey nolds, Route 1, Robbins, secre tary and treasurer; W. F. Ritter, Jr., Route 1, Robbins, publicity chairman; Norris Shields, Route 1, Robbins, chairman Of broiler show; John Chisholm, Route 1, Carthage, vice-chairman of broil er show; Willie G. Harris, Route 1, Carthage, chairman of egg show; Luther Paschal, chairman poultry princess contest and Carr Paschal, chairman of prizes com mittee. This year’s show will include; broilers, ages six weeks through nine weeks of age; eggs—both brown and white shelled; 4-H Club pullets; and a poultry prin cess contest. Free door prizes will he given. The educational program will be on “How Poultry Auction Markets Help Growers” and “Poul.trv Management For More Profits.” Seriously Ill Six months after suffering two severe strokes, Gen. George C. Marshall still lies seriously ill in Walter Reed Army Hospital, ac cording to an Associated Press dispatch this week. Hospital officials said the con dition of the 78-year-old soldier- statesman is unchanged. The strokes early this year left him nearly helpless. Last month when the Senate paid tribute to the World War 2 chief of staff and former secre tary of state it was announced that Marshall could read and un derstand but that his speech had been impaired. Last month citizens of Pine hurst had a marker erected re naming the Pine Grove in Gen. Marshall’s Iionor. Formal dedica tion ceremonies have still not been set, though they are ex pected to be held in the fall. The marker is on the roadside about 50 yards from the Sandhills Woman’s Exchange. Joe Allen l^amed To Welfare Board Joe H. Allen, Carthage mer chant, has been named a member of the Moore County Board of Public Welfare replacing E. H. Garrison, Jr. The announcement of Mr. Al len’s appointment was made this week by Paul Butler of Southern Pines, chairman of the board. Mr. Garrison, who was farm agent of the county for almost three decades, has been on the board for three years. “He was an active member of our board during his tenure of service,” Mr. .Butler said, “and he always had an abiding interest in the social betterment of the people in the county. He knew the county and its people well and his knowledge was inval uable. We feel that the Moore County welfare department has advanced during his service.” Allen is actually an appointee of the Board of County Conuriis- sioners. He was officially sworn in Monday by C. C. Kennedy, Clerk of Court. Mr. Allen operates Allen’s Drug and Sundrjj Shop across the street from the courthouse. He came to Carthage 27 years ago from Anson County, where he had operated a similar business. He is a member of the First Baptist Church in Carthage and serves as the budget director and on the Board of Deacons. He is president of the Build ing and Loan Association in Car thage, a vice president of the Car olina Bank, and a member of the Board of Directors of the bank’s branch in Carthage. A Rotarian, he has been active in both Boy Scout and Girl Scout work, and during the war he served on the rationing board for Carthage. ' The other member of the Board of Public Welfare is Mrs. John L. Frye of Robbins. Mrs. Walter B. Cole, who is superin tendent of the department, serves as the Board’s secretary. School Board Also Approves New Principal The Southern Pines Board of Education has elected the princi pal of the Mt. Pleasant (N. C.) school, Luther A. Adams, as sup erintendent of the local system to succeed Dr. A. C. Dawson. The Board also announced yes terday that James E. Walser, as sistant principal of the Clover (S. C.) High School, had been ap pointed principal here to succeed Irie Leonard. Adams, reached at his home last night, said he planned to be in Southern Pines next week to look for housing. His election as superintendent here is effective immediately, John M. Howarth, school board chairman, said yes terday. Mr. Walser’s tenure be gins in August. The school board has held many meetings and interviewed several candidates for the sup erintendent’s position. It became vacant when Dr. Dawson resign ed in June to become executive director of the North Carolina Education Association. The prin cipal’s job was also vacated in June when Leonard resigned. He has since been appointed princi pal of the Shallotte schools. Adams, who is 36, has been in education since 1948 when he taught for one year at the Alta- hamaw-Ossippee High School in Alamance County. In 1949 he moved to Mt. Pleasant as head coach of the three major sports. Appointed principal in 1951, he became what his neighbors described as a “human dynamo, dedicated almost completely to public education and the better ment of his community.” . While at Mt. Pleasant, accord ing to a resume of his career pub lished yesterday by the Concord Tribune, Mr. Adams (1) saw his school accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Sec ondary Schools, (2) directed two building programs, one for a complete high school plant and another for a vocational building and cafeteria, (3) instituted many improvements in his school’s com mercial department, (4) initiated a guidance program with a full time guidance director, (5) init iated the first foreign language program in the elementary schools of Alamance County, (6) instituted an elementary school library and enlarged* the high school library, (7) initiated a drive for funds and built a mod ern football stadium for the school in 1955, (8) directed the construction of a gymnasium, the first one in Mt. Pleasant’ls his- torv, and (9) started courses in baad and instrumental music in the school. His activities in civic affairs also are impressive. He is a for mer president of the Mt. Pleas ants Lions Club, was chairman of the March of Dimes campaign there for eight years, chairman of the United Fund drive for five years, and worked closely with the Society for Crippled Children and Adults. In educational circles he is well known. He has served as president of the Cabarrus Coun ty chapter of the North Carolina Education Association, and is a past president of the Cabarrus County Principal’s Association. He holds the usual memberships in educational associations. He is a Lutheran and served his church as a Councilman and a Sunday School teacher. His wife, the former Elizabeth Wal lace of Albemarle, also was a Sunday School teacher. Mr. Adams is a native of Gas ton County. He was orphaned at six and went to Winston-Salem to live in the Children’s Home. He graduated from R. J. Rey nolds High School in Winston- Salem in 1941, then spent three years in the Marine Air Corps, part of that time in the South Pacific Theatre. He received his Bachelor’s De gree from Lenoir Rhyne College in 1948 and his Master’s Degree in school administration jointly from Appalachian State Teacher’s College and George Peabody College in Nashville, Tenn. His bachelor’s degree was in physical education and social studies. 'When he moved to Mt. Pleas- (Continued on page 8)