Dulles, Britain, France in Agreement
On Suez Canal Resolution To Go To UN
United Nations. N. Y. U.R)
Sicritarv of State John Foster
Dulles reached "complete agree
ment" with Britain and France
today on a Suez Canal resolu
tion to be put before the U. N.
Security Council.
Ass'-tant Secretary of State
Carl McArdle said he concurred
in a British statement that "com
plete aercement" was reached
on the resolution in a confer
ence among Dulles. British For
eign Secretary S e I w y n Lloyd
and French Foreign Minister
Christian Pineau thv morning.
The resolution was scheduled
to go before the council when
it meets later todav.
Dulles talked with Lloyd and
Pineau for two hours.
A U. S. spokesman said he
planned to see separately Soviet
Foreign Minister Dmitri Shcpi-
lov and Belgian Foreign Minis
ter Paul-Henri Spaak before
leaving for the United Nations
Spokesmen Uninformative
American and British spokes
men were uninformat've about
this morning's talks. They faid
the three foreign ministers dis
cussed "the whole sum and sub
stance of the Brifi.-h-French pro
posal and the prospects for it."
Thev talked about procedure and
tactics in the momentous debate,
thev said.
Britain and France were ready
with a resolution sking the
council to endorse the London
Suez conference proposals for
international operation of the
canal, nationalized by Egvpt on
July 2fi. The plan. ori"inally nro
posed in London bv Dulles, was
Approved by 18 of the 22 nations
present.
Dulles was reported to ap
prove the plan only in prin
ciple" now. convinced that Brit
ish and French attempts to press
for a quick Securitv Council' ac
ceptance would lead only to a
Soviet vctq. The American posi
tion was reported )o be that a
"machinery of negotiation"
should be set up. and that with
even foreign ministers here
there was no time like the pres-
Suif Filed Against
Medford Company
Ira F. Powers Furniture com
pany. Portland, is seeking a total
of $11,273.43 in a complaint
filed in circuit court against
M"'tford Furniture company.
The plaintiff asks judgment
of $fl. 112.80 in the first cause
of action, $2,232 03 in the sec
ond cause, and $1,198.64 in the
third cause.
In the first cause of action,
the complaint states Medford
Furniture company owes the
plaintiff $6,572.40 principal on
a promissary note. $270.20 in
terest on the same note and
$1,000 attorney fees.
The Portland firm alleges in
the second cause that the defen
dant owes $2,232.03 plus six
per cent per annum interest on
merchandise delivered during
April. May and June of 1956. In
the third cause, the plaintiff
claims to have paid $1,198.63
for the defendant to a credit
corporation on Sept. 28, 1956,
ent. Dulles said Thur.sday night
the council meeting might be
the "most momentous" in his
tory of the body.
Dag Participation Urged
Abdel Khalik Hassouni, secre
tary general of the Arab League,
said in a statement issued in
New York that the council could
point the way toward a peace
ful solution by arranging nego
tiations in which Secretary Gen-1 were focusing some attention on
eral Dag Hammarskjold could
play an active part.
He also offered an alternative
solution creation of a negotiat
ing body from among members
of the Security Council with
Hammarskjold sitting with th:,
group. He said non-members
could be invited to join.
U. N. delegates meanwhile
Cairo. India's roving diplomat,
V. K. Krishna Menon, arrived
there today for new talk with
Nasser. They were believed dis
cussing a compromise plan in
which Nasser would agree to ne
gotiate with a team representing
all users of the Suez Canal.
Krishna Menon may bring this
plan to New York.
Kefauver Shifts Campaign Fight
To 'Right To Suffer' Statement
Tucson. Ariz. (U.RI Sen
Estes Kefauver shifted his fight
today from Vice President
Nixon to President Eisenhower
and his White House aides.
The Democratic vice presi
dential contender, in a speech
prepared for delivery at Phoe
nix, Ariz., gibed at the state
ment of Presidential Assistant
Howard Pyle that "the right to
suffer is one of the joys of a
free economy."
This is a joy which we
Democrats which Adlai Ste
venson and I and your leaders
here don't wish to further in
flict upon you," Kefauver said.
Explanatory Comment
Pyle made the statement at a
news conference on May 23. The
White House later issued an ex
planatory comment on the re
marks by Pyle who had describ
ed the right to "prosper" a joy
of a free economy also.
Kefauver's derisive use of the
Pyle remark for campaiging in
Arizona, where Pyle was once a
GC'P governor, followed a new
jab by Kefauver at President Ei
senhower. Kefauver delivered
it in an evening speech in sub
urban Los Angeles before board
ing his chartered campaign
plane to fly to Arizona.
The senator prefaced his com
ment by savin., that Republicans
had been trying to keep Presi
dent Eisenhower isolated on a
"mountain" while other GOP
campaigners do the "grubbing."
"The time has come when
President Eisenhower can no
longer stay on his mountain top.
We are getting over that," Ke
fauver said.
Kefauver also blasted former
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey.
He charged at a news confer
ence that the Republican high
command apparently had de
cided that Dewey "will be the
one to take the low road this
time."
Asked To Comment
The Democratic vice Pres'
aeniiai canaiaaie maae mis state
ment when asked to comment
on the former New York gov
ernor's recent speech in which
he attacked Adlai E. Stevenson
as an "ill-informed, impulsive
and mediocre" man.
"I expect we can look for
more underhanded statements
frcm Mr. Dewey," Kefauver
said. He said Dewey was on the
defensive because Stevenson has
been making "real headway" in
his campaign to defeat President
Eisenhower.
Kefauver went today to Ari
zona following a rugged, 19
hour campaign that took him
into California. He will visit
Tucson, Phoenix and Pueblo,
Colo., today.
SUCCEEDING TO SEAT of Associate Justice Sherman
Minton October 15, Judge William J. Brennan, Jr., has been
appointed to United States Supreme Court by Presi
dent Eisenhower. In picture made at Rumson, N. J.,
home are, standing at rear: Sons Lieutenant William J.
Brennan III (left) of Marine Corps and Hugh Leonard
Brennan. Seated from left: Daughter Nancy, Brennan and
Mrs. Brennan. He is Democrat, Catholic. (International)
Nixon Says GOP Has;
No False Hopes for
Early End of Draft
Washington (U.R) Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon Thurs
day night said the Republicans
are not going to hold out false
hopes about ending the draft in
the immediate future.
Nixon's statement was a new
GOP slap at Democratic presi
dential nominee Adlai Steven
son's proposal to review the
need for continuing the draft and
end it as soon as national se
curity permits.
The vice president spoke to
a nationwide radio and television
audience at an unusual half-hour
news conference with eight re
porters in cities across the na
tion. The cities were among
those he visited during his re
cent 16-day campaign swing
through 32 states.
"We aren't going to tell the
American people hold out any
false hopes that they can end
the draft at some time in the
immediate future," he said. "It is
completely irresponsible to sug
gest it can be done."
The vice president said that
"thousands of American boys"
went to Korea unprepared and
that "some of them died because
they didn't have the training.
Under President Eisenhower
that will never happen."
"I assure the American people
that as soon as it is possible to
end the draft it will be done,"
he said. "But .ve're not going to
kid the people in an election
year." .
Friday, October 5, 1956
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
Farming Third in
Accidental Deaths
Chicago (U.R) The coming of
the mechanized age brought an
increase in accident fatalities
among farmers.
An Iowa City physician said
that farming ranks third among
the major industries in ac
cidental deaths, with motor
vehicle accidents responsible for
the greatest proportion.
Dr. Franklin H. Top, writing
in the American Medical As
sociation Journal, said that when
the farmer rested his horse he
also rested himself.
Farm machinery, said Top, en
abled the farmer to stop his rest
period, but only increased his
fatigue. The physician said that
studies show there is a mid
morning and mid-afternoon peak
in which the majority of farm
accidents occur.
Dead tine Sunday Classified is at
noun Saturday. 10 a.m Monday tor
Monday: other days 5:3C orevious day
FOUND DEAD IN CAR
Salem (U.R) Harry Ness, 63,
Salem, was found dead in his
wrecked automobile yesterday
near the state hospital farm four
miles east of here. A doctor said
Ness apparently died of a heart
attack.
BUSINESS
CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Our Representative Will JL
Be Glad To Call On You, &Ufllv
2-9331 leiyiXiaMEWjioJ
Portland (U.R) Vice Presi
dent Richard Nixon said last
night that the partnership plan
for power development had run
into difficulty because "the presi
dent has not had the support he
should have had in Congress."
Nixon made the remark in re
ply to a question by Arden X.
Pangborn, editor of the Oregon
Journal. Pangborn was one of
eight newspapermen who voiced
queries before television cam
eras throughout the nation last
night. ,
The coast-to-coast hookup was
sponsored by the national Re
publican senatorial committee
and was billed as the first trans
continental press interview.
Pangborn asked Nixon what
the administration planned to do
to carry out the partnership
plan announced by President
Eisenhower. Nixon said the plan
was designed for full develop
ment in a way that did not leave
the federal government to do it
all "for we do not have the
funds for it." .
reimbursed the plaintiff.
Representing Ira F. Powers
Furniture company are Phillips,
Coughlin, Bucll and Phillips,
and that the defendant has never Portland law firm.
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