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Page 2
Stocks Regain Part
Of Thursday Losses
3
2
2
4
9
3
New York-CPb-Stocks re
covered about half of Thurs
day's losses today.
Steel gains ranged to near
ly 4 points in Youngstown
Sheet & Tube with gains of
2 points or more in U.S. Steel,
Luken3, Jones & Laughlin,
and Armco.
Electronics gained more
tnan 3 in Consolidated Elec
tronics, Packard - Bell and
Motorola.
Coppers rose on higher
prices for the metal abroad.
Chemicals improved a point
to 2 points.
Today' prices on selected docks:
Allied Chemical 117
Alum Co. Am. ..,.100
American Can
American Motors
AT&T
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York - (LTD - Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 633.07, up
7.48; 20 railroads 156.95. up
2.03; 15 utilities 87.45, un
changed, and 65 slocks
210.84, up 2.09. Sales today
were about 2,880,000 shares
compared with 3.060,000
shares Thursday. -
Anaconda Copper
Armco bteel
Bendix Aviation .
Bethlehem Steel
Boeing Air
Caterpillar Corp.
Chrysler Corp.. .
Continental Can
Crown Zellerbach ,
Curtiss Wright
Dow Chemical
Du Pont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
General Electric
General Foods
Georgia Pacific
Graham Paige
Greyhound
Gulf Oil
Homestake Mining
Idaho rower
I. B. M.
Int Paper
Johns Manville
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Katy
Montana Power Co.
Montgomery Ward
Nat'l. Biscuit
New York Central
Pac Gas & Elec ..
Penney. J. C,
Penn KR
Radio Corporation
Richfield Oil
Safeway
Sears
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High Living Told
In Communist Party
Los Angeles Mrs. Ad-
ele K. Silva, Oakland, Calif.,
told congressional probers
Thursday that "high living"
made up part of her Commun
ist party activity.
Mrs. Silva, 45, said she
worked as an FBI undercover
agent in a Communist front
group covering the Beverly
Hills- Hollywood - Wilshire
area.
She told members of the
House un-American activities
subcommittee that cocktail
parties, expensive shows and
"high living" were part of her
program as a Communist.
"I was instructed to play
on the sympathies of minority
races to get them to join the
party," she said.
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Co.
Southern Pacific
Standard California
Standard Indian
Standard N. J.
Sun Mines
Texas Co. ..
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Tex Pac Land Trust
Tramimerica
Trans World Air
Tri-Conttnental
Union Carbide ,
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Air Lines
U. S. Rubber
U. S. Steel
Youngstown SAT
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Agency Promises
More Effort in
Space Exploration
Washington -fl!PD- The na
tion's space agency promised
a "considerable" speed-up in
outer space exploration to
day, and indicated it will ask
Congress for more money
early next year.
Richard E. Horner, associ
ate director of the National
Aeronautics and Space Ad
ministration, made the state
ments at a news conference
called to discuss the transfer
of the- Army's space team,
headed by Dr. Warner , von
Braun, to NASA.
Order Discussed
Horner and Dr. Herbert F.
York, Defense Department di
rector of research and engin
eering, discussed President
Eisenhower's order to put the
Huntsville, Ala., team under
the civilian agency's control.
York said flatly .that in his
opinion this "should have
been done a, year ago."
The Army resisted NASA's
efforts a year ago to take ov
er the famed team, which put
America's first satellites in or
bit around the earth and
around the sun. At that time
Eisenhower supported the
Army.
While Horner and York pre
dicted a speed-up in the space
effort, they made it clear that
development of the nation's
largest super-booster rocket
will continue for another four
or five months under divided
authority of NASA and the
Defense Department.
Depends on Congress
That is because the plan
must go to Congress in Janu
ary and goes into effect only
if Congress does not veto it
within 60 days.
Horner said it was "almost
obvious that we are consider
ing a supplemental" appropri
ation. He said Congress au
thorized $30 million more for
NASA than it actually appro
priated in the last session and
NASA might ask for that
much. . .
Russia Putting (Pressure on France
To ScheduDe EarDy Summot Coherence
By ALB1N KREBS
TJPI Correspondent
The Soviet Union lined up
with the United States and
Britain today in putting pres
sure on France for a summit
conference as soon as possible.
In an "authorized" state
ment, the official Soviet Tass
news agency in Moscow said
the Kremlin's view on a sum
mit session is unchanged and
feels that the earlier one is
called "the better it will be
for the cause of peace."
The Tass statement said it
was issued to correct "con
flicting reports . . ." in the
western press' about the So
viet position on the summit.
In effect, it put Soviet Per
mier Nikita Khrushchev in
accord with the reported posi
tion of President Eisenhower
and British Prime Minister
Harold Macmillan, who pre
fer an early summit, and
against French President
Charles de Gaulle, who wants
to wait until spring.
Authorized French sources
in Paris indicated today that
France no longer is thinking
in terms of a western sum
mit conference in the imme
diate future.
Want Early Meeting
This appeared to indicate
a major difference from the
view expressed by Eisenhow
er that a western summit
should take place at an early
date. The President was un
derstood to have suggested
one for the end of October
or early November in letters
sent to Paris, London and
Bonn.
Khrushchev was believed
r ady to make a flying visit
to see de Gaulle in Paris to
try to persuade the French
leader in person about the
need for an early summit.
Authoritative British
sources in London said today
that Macmillan fully supports
Eisenhower's belief that an
early western summit now
Girl, 14, Tells of
Kidnap, Rape by
Drunken Ex-Convict
Lyndonville, Vt. (UPD - A
missing Maine baby sitter
turned up 150 miles from
home today and told police a
drunken ex-convict kidnaped
her and raped her repeatedly
over a five-day period.
The ex -convict, Rodney
Austin, 44, Newcastle, Maine,
left her at his brother's home
here at 1 a.m. and fled in his
car, vowing he would not be
taken alive, the 14-year-old
girld told police.
Search for Austin, who
served time for murderous as
sault, covered all of northern
Vermont near the Canadian
border.
This town is about 150
miles from the girl's home in
Maine.
.The girl, Sharon Simmons,
told a hair-raising tale of be-
Chessman Busy
Preparing Petition
San Quentin, Calif. -(DPD-Caryl
Chessman pounded a
typewriter today in his death
row cell four floors above an
eight-sided apple green gas
chamber that was to have
ended his life at 10 o'clock
this morning.
Instead of preparing to die,
the twice-condemned Los An
geles kidnap - rapist worked
furiously to complete cutting
stencils for a 235 page peti
tion to the U.S. Supreme
court.
He has until Nov. 3 to file
the petition asking a review
of his case, starting with his
trial and conviction in 1948
as the infamous "red light
bandit" who prowled lovers'
lanes in the Los Angeles
area. Chessman was convicted
on 17 felony counts, including
robbery, theft, sex offenses
and kidnaping. . ;
$50 Fine Meted in
Hatf ield Collision
Portland-dJPD-Glenn Arthur
Loveng, 40, driver of a car
which struck the rear of
Gov. Marls Hatfield's limou
sine here Oct. 11, was fined
$50 in Municipal court Thurs
day. He was found guilty of
being drunk on the street.
Neither Loveng nor the
governor appeared, in court.
Hatfield and his wife were
shaken up ,in the accident. ;
Nyssa Man Dies
Following Collision
Nyssa-rtiPK- A 76 - year - old
Nyssa man died here Thurs
day after his car hit the rear
of a grain truck parked near
the center of the town. He
waa Lloyd Thomas Marshal.
A passenger, Dorothy Smith,
of Nyssa, had head and chest
injuries. . . '
ing dragged from the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil A. Hallo-
well, Damariscotta Mills,
Maine, late Saturday.
Sharon told Maine Police
Detective Camille Carrier at
the Vermont State Police bar
racks in nearby St. Johnsbury
that Austin vowed he would
not be captured alive.
She said he told her he was
going to an abandoned camp
at Lake Carmi where he had
a gun "stashed away."
"If they want me they can
come and get me, but they're
not going to take me alive,"
she quoted Austin.
Carrier said, "There is no
doubt in my mind that she
left ' the Hallowell house
against her will." He pointed
out that she left behind her
hat and coat and the three
Hallowell children. The par
ents returned at 1 a.m. Sun
day and found she was gone.
Sharon said Austin banged
on the Hallowell's door.
'Very Drunk'
"He was very drunk,"
Sharon said, "and I started to
shut the door. Then he shoved
the door open and entered the
house."
From the house he dragged
her to his car and they drove
to a clearing where he un
dressed her . and raped her
twice.
She told Carrier she passed
out after he dragged her back
in his car and the next thing
she knew she was in Berlin,
N.H., where he stopped for
gasoline.
After this, she said, she re
membered almost nothing.
a beautiful "mw room"
in just one day win
THE DE LUXE LATEX WALL FAINT
has become urgently neces- a
sary.
So far the French govern
ment has not admitted Khru
shchev was coming to Paris
but most doubts were laid to
rest by leaks from govern
ment circles about an "im
minent Khrushchev visit."
UPI correspondent Arthur
Higbee reported from Paris
today that it is was agreed
in diplomatic circles Khru
shchev was due there within
month.
UPI correspondent Henry
Shapiro reported from Mos
cow that de Gaulle's surprise
rejection of a winter summit
meeting may have been based
largely on his desire to meet
Khrushchev on the same foot
ing as other Western leaders.
Final Link
A de Gaulle - Khrushchev
conference would complete a
chain of personal meetings be
tween Western leaders and
Khrushchev. Macmillan visit
ed Khrushchev in Moscow
last spring and was followed
by the Khrushchev-Eisenhower
Camp David talks.
Diplomatic observers in
Moscow thought it would be
difficult for de Gaulle's West
ern allies to press him to
change his mind on when the
summit should be held! But
Khrushchev, being an "out
sider," might be just the per
son to ?pply such pressure.
Julia Ward Howe's famow
song, "Battle - Hymn of the
Republic," was first" -published
in The Atlantic Moni
ly in 1862. And she had it
published anonymously.
clogston's
Metal
Weather Stripping
and Screens
Estimates Gladly '
Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings
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