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Russia Expected To Back Arab
Nations in Middle East Conflict
j-, JerutaJem, Israel U.R t.r
ti;t theiliddle iist rr.y turn i
iVito anoiiier Korea mounted 1
hers-, today.
C Informed sources believed
Russia would back belligerent j
.Arab nations without becoming
directly involved j.i tho Middle ;
E; fighting in the tanie ruan-j
rier in which it backed China
and NorU Korea in the Korean '
war. '
Kuisia appeared to be making
a fresh eflort to establish its in-!
iluem in the Middle East. Dip
loinartt observers said the Soviets-1
may switch their efforts
to Syria following the destruc
tion much of Egypt's military
power by the Israeli, Eritish and
t rench invasioa forces.
Russia C will not abandon '
Eypt,chowever, observers said. I
Tue withdrawal of the Soviet
ambassador from brael, which
was announced. Monday, , was !
s en here a a move to placate
the Egyptians for Russia's fail
ure to offer tangible help during ;
the EgypSan-lraeli fighting and
the subsequent m with Anglo- i
French troops. i
Soviet AmBassdor to Israel
Alexander Abramov was ex
pected to lwive within two or
tliree days on orders from Mos
cow. Foreign Office sources said
the Israeli amb.sacior to the So
vgt Union would also be called
Imme for .-onsuHation if rela
tions with tlie Soviets become
more complicated.
There was little fear in dip
lomatic circles fcere that Rus
sia would send "volunteers' to
fight for Egypt as the Chinese
did in North Korea. But in
formed sources said the Soviets
may try tc strengthen their ties
with Syria to maintain a base of
influence in the Middle East.
The sources said the Arabs
need tanglible aid more than
anything else, but such aid did
not appear to be forthcoming.
An Israeli military spokesman
said the campaign in Egypt's Sa-na-i
Pehiitsula has ended, a cease
fire was in for.ee and there was
Summary of 1952
Election in Nation
Washington U.Ri Here's
how tile votiiTg went in 1952:
President Republican Dwight
D. Eisenhower carried 39 states
with 442 electoral votes, polling
33,937,252 popular votes or 55.4
per cent of the total. Democrat
Adlai. E. Stevenson carried nine
states Alabama, Arkansas,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana.
Mississippi, North Carolina,
South Carolina and West Vir
giniawith 89 electoral votes.
He got 27,314,992 popular votes
or 44.6 per cent of the total. -Senate
43 Republicans, 47 :
Democrats and one Independent
1954 elcctign changed this to 48
Democrats,. 47 -Republicans and
one Independent Sen. Wayne
More, Ore. who later became a
Democrat.
House 221 Republicans, 213
Democrats, one Independent.
1954 election changed this to 232
Democrats. 203 Republicans.
no more fighting.
At the same time, the govern
ment issued a statement saying
it "has instructed its represen
tative at the United Nations to
confirm once again that Israel
agrees to a cease fire."
"Since this morning, the
fighting has ceased and quiet
reigns." the statement declared.
"The Army was instructed to ob
serve the cease fire with extreme
care."
Premier David Ben Gurion
Monday's proposed peace nego
tiations with Egyptian President
Gamal Adbel Nasser, but he
warned that any settlement must
ensure the freedom of the Suez
Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba for
Israeli ships.
Locker Meat SALE
GCut and Wrapped Phone 3-1666
o ALL MEATS ARE INSPECTED
72 or Whole Beef
Hind Quarter
Front Quarter
Pork Loins .(Whole)
Pork Shoulders (Whole)
Tasty Home Cured HOWIS (Whole)
JIM'S MEATS
At AL'S MARKET -838 V. McAndrews Road
35c ib.
39c b
32c .b
49c ib
39c b
53c ib.
OPEN
SUNDAYS
General Motors
Trucks on Display
New CMC trucks for 1957 are
now on display at Haupert Trac
tor company, 3610 North Pacific
highway.
Features of the new light and
medium-duty trucks include a
I new 347 cubic inch V-8 truck
i engine with 206 gross horsepow
' er. Some models have one horse
power of pulling strength for
each lS'-j pounds of vehicle
weight, according to GMC truck
and coach division officials. New
axles and four-wheel drive that
can be converted to a two-wheel-drive
additional features.
Two six-cylinder and a V-8
power various models. Both six
cylinders have 270 cubic-inch
displacement, but through dif
ferent carburetion, one develops
130 and other 140 horsepower.
Compression ratio of the new
V-8 is 7.8 to 1.
Dual stop and tail lights are
now standard on panel and Sur
burban 100 and 250 models and
large 60 ampere-hour batteries
are used in all V-8 models. Other
refinements include the new
heavy-duty T-3 headlamps on
all 300-370 models. V-8 engines
have a new inverted design dis
tributor that permits the setting
of points with the engine running.
New Hampshire
Hamlet Casts
Ballots for Ike
Ellsworth. N. H. U.R This
tiny mountain hamlet voted first
in the nation today nine ballots
solidly for President Eisen
hower. "We all voted here and we
stayed up all night to do it,"
said the nation's first voter,
Chester Avery. "We hope this
sets an example for the rest of
the country-"
"Americans should vote 100
per cent not 60 per cent." said
Avery, a 66-year-old honey sales
man and part-time worker in a
crutch factory.
Midnight Supper
He and fellow residents of
this mountain town gathered for
a midnight buffet supper with
three huge jugs of coffee, in the
130-year-old former schoolhouse
that serves at Ellsworth's Town
hall.
The voters tossed coats and
mufflers on the long wooden
benches that once served stu
dents of this wilderness area.
Then chatting and laughing,
they made ready to vote.
Avery, oldest voter in the
hamlet, said he'd "wavered only
once" from voting a straight Re
publican ticket. That was in
1912 when he first voted for
president and cast his ballot for
Bull Moose party candidate
Theodore Roosevelt.
Won Voting Race
The Ellsworth voters won a
race with two other hamlets for
the honor of being the first vot
ers in the nation this election
day.
Waterville Valley residents
came in second, with 13 votes
for President Eisenhower. Hart's
Location, third in the voting
race, cast five votes for Adlai
Stevenson and three for Mr.
Eisenhower.
All three towns supported
President Eisenhower in 1952.
SCHOOL IN FUNERAL HOME
Paterson. N. J. (U.R) A fu
neral home serves as a substi
tute polling place today because
of severe fire damage to Public
School No. 24.
Jakarta, Indonesia (U.R)
Robert G. Gofford, 32, of Port
land, Ore., the assistant repre
sentative here for the Asia
Foundation, died Sunday.
Onion Marketing
Order Proposed
Portland U.R) A proposed
onion marketing order for Mal
heur county, Ore., and southwest
Idaho subject to approval of two
thirds of the area's growers in a
referendum was recommended
today by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
Robert Eaton, in charge of the
Northwest USDA fruit and vege
table marketing office here, said
the referendum probably will
be held some time after Nov. 26.
The proposed marketing order
A:
1. "3. 'i
13-
irdi
m
Don't Forget
OPEN
WED.
'Til 9 P.M.
Adlai Confident;
Sees International
Crisis Worsening
Libertyville, 111. U.R) Ad
lai E. Stevenson arrived home
early today to cast his Demo
cratic ballot fully confident he
will be elected president.
Stevenson issued a statement
shortly after his plane arrived
from Boston on the interna
tional situation, saying the
"crisis is getting worse."
The Democratic candidate
candidate planned to vote at
Half Day, a village near his
country home so named because
it was half day's carriage ride
from Chicago. Tonight Steven
son will motor to the presiden
tial suite of the Sheraton-Black-stune
Hotel in Chicago to receive
returns.
Russia Said Encouraged
Stevenson said "the collapse"
of America s alliance with Bri
tain and France has encouraged
Russia to march back into
Hungary.
"If this fatal division in the
West continues, it will invite
further Soviet trouble-making
elsewhere, in Poland and For
mosa, for example," said Steven
son. Stevenson's election eve talk
from Boston, carried over a na
tional television network, con
tained the strongest language
on the President's health he has
used anywhere in his campaign.
Nixon Seen as President
He told the voters that they
were not picking "a presid.)t
for tomorrow," but "the man,
or the men, who will serve you
as president for the next four
years" in today's election.
"And distaseful as this matter
is, I must say bluntly that cvery
piece of scientific evidence we
have, every lesson of history
and experience, indicates that a
Republican victory would mean
that (Vice President) Nixon
would probably be president of
this country within the next
four years," he said.
Tuesday, November C. 1S58
MEDFORD (OREGO) MUL TIUS THR
Mayor of Yakima j
Dies in Hospital
Yakima (U.R) Mayor Carl H. i
Behnke of Yakima died this j
morning in a Yakima hospital
following a heart attack. He was :
64. j
Behnke had been taken to the
hospital Oct. 29 after becoming j
ill of a heart ailment. He was !
elected mayor last spring and '
took office June 4.
Behnke was born in St. Paul.
Minn., and was a graduate of i
Oregon State College. For many I
years he was associated with the !
fruit and produce business in :
Yakima. j
Behnke is survived by his '.
widow and two sons. '
Due To Popular Demand
WE WILL BE OPEN 0
0 o o
Every Wednesday,
UNTIL 8 P.M.
Crater Dept. Store
CENTRAL POINT, OREGON
AM
SAVE a VOTE for a skirt . . . slated for your acclaim on fashion . . . low priced platform . .
our leading candidates for your Fall and Winter wardrobes . . , and you can't have too many
to skirts . . . you'll .'want several at this big sayings. Hurry in Wednesday and pick a winner!
the Skirts you Need . . . the Styles you
lik . . . Candidates for Savings.
100 All Wbol
New Fall Colors
Straight and Flared Styles
I Solid Colored Flannels, Plaids
and Tweeds
Sizes 10 to 18
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL . . .
id
2)9
VALUES io $1495
112 East Main - Next Door to Robinson Bros. - Free Parking
3
'Death, Survival'
May Rest on Votes,
Kefauver Declares
Miami, Fla. (U.R) Sen. Esles
Kefauver has warned the Amer
ican people that the question of
"death and survival" may well
rest on their votes in the presi
dential election.
Kefauver flew here in a final
hand-shaking bid to return Flor
ida to the Democrats. The Repub
licans won Florida by some
100,000 votes in 1952, but the
Democrats have expressed con
fidence that they can win back
the state today.
The Tennessee senator, accom
panied by his wife, Nancy, ar
rived for a news conference, a
motorcade tour through the
greater Miami area and visits to
Hialeah, Opa-Locka, North Mi
ami, Miami, Coral Gables and
South Miami.
To Vote in Tennessee ,
He was to leave at 11 a.m. for
Chattanooga, Tenn., where he
will vote, and return to Wash
ington tonight.
"The Republican Party has
failed to keep the peace," the
Democratic vice presidential
nominee said in a prepared
statement.
"The Russian army massacred
the Hungarian rebels fighting
for their freedom. Only the other
day the flames of war erupted
again in the Middle East. And
I emerging from the debris of a
bankrupt American foreign pol
icy, we find ourselves . . . cut
off from our ancient friends and
allies."
1
CANNON GIFT j
New Boston, N.H. CU.R)
The "Molly Stark," a cannon j
captured from the British at .the j
Battle of Bennington in 1777, j
has been fired on every July 4 ;
: since. The four-pounder, manu-'
I factured in Paris in 1943, was j
j presented to the New Boston Ar- i
! tillery Company of the New i
j Hampshire militia by. Gen. John j
Stark and is named for his wife,
j . ;
: includes the authority to regu
j late grade size and maturity and
i the use of shipping holidays not '
I to exceed four days. The order
i was requested by Malheur coun-!
I ty and southwest Idaho Onion '
; Growers association.
Septic Tank
Owners Take
Notice
Home owners have discovered
that septic tanks stop-up and
overflow. Two reasons are first,
because the tanks are not cleaned
at proper intervals; secondly,
toilet tissue that does not readily
disintegrate may clou the drains
and force them to back up!
Recojrnizine the importance of
this, AID Toilet Tissue is pro
cessed so that it absorbs water
completely and quickly dives
less trouble with clogged discharge
drains in the septic tank system.
Follow this plan for best insur
ance: Consult your County Health
Department, your plumber, or a
septic tank service company, for
advice on cleaning your tank. Use
MD Toilet Tissue!
YARDAGE
SHOP
410 East Main Wednesdoy Vl" '
f Phone 3-5681 Evenings ''J1f
1 MM 0
Specials for Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday
And what a wonderful selection!
Cottons - woolens - nylons - rayons
and combinations . . . and more ar
riving daily. Take advantage of
these prices to "sew and save"!
Come in and browse around.
80 Sq. Count
COTTON
PERCALES
Special
This week
29
yd.
T
Extra Special - VIRGIN
WOOL JERSEY
$98
i Yd.
54" Tube 7 o.
Excellent for Blouses,
Reg. $2.89 NOW
EXTRA SPECIAL!
Tyrolean Prints
59
Little or No Iron,
Crease-Resistant.
REG. 79e
Yd.
X
WOOL! WOOL! WOOL!
Skirt Lengths 1
198
Plaids and Plains,
85 Wool, 15 Rayon
60" Wide REG. $3.98
$498
Yd.
Color Fast Pr-Shrunk
Cotton Flannels
39
Prints and Plaint,
In White, Yellow, Blut
and Red REG. 49c
Yd.
3:
fcirrtrt -
For Only $500
You can make child's cobt or a man's
jacket or a shorty coat mut of $5.98 to
$10.00 a yard woolens.
Come in and let us S'S 98
show you how! B
OUR PRICE I Yd.
Washable Crease Resistant
Rayon Gabardine
59
45" Wide 1 to 5
Yard Cuts REG.
79c NOW
Yd.
I
I
Hand Washable
1
FINE QUILTED
COTTON PRINTS
This Week Only
REG. 1.59 Yd.
NOW
98
Yd,
TAFFETA
59'
o
nif if im iJ
4 Pieces Only Prints
45." Wide. REG. 1.19,
SPECIAL CLOSE-OUT
I
Quilted Taffeta
Rose and Yellow Solid Colors
Red and White Blact
and White -Checked1.
REG. 1.49 NOW
If You Are Having Thread Troubles
Try Our
BELDING CORTICELLI THREAD
The Only Waxed Thread Today!
Large, 800 yards 39c
Small, 125 yards 10c
2
Yd.
DON'T FORGET OUR ZIPPSR&
100 Colors to Choose From at These
EXTRA LOW PRICES
7" Skirl Zippers JJ
l2"PJackel ......,.w..llc
Famoes Brand Narnj!
The YARDAGE SHOP
410 East o
(Main St.
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