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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1960)
if Bloody Algerian War Goes Into Seventh Year A ; HMIMMaHHMMMManl fclllll II Im'iIiIiIII ill" ii 1 Til I H ai m I TITLE CHANGES HANDS Annette Drig fer, left, of Freeport, N.Y., still had the title of "Miss U.S.A." when this photo was taken Sunday. Monday she was disqualified on the grounds that she was not 20 years old and single, as she stated on her contest entry form, but 13 and married. At right, her re- placement, Judith Achter, 18, of St. Louis, Mo., is shown as she arrived at New York City en route to London to represent the United Slates in the "Miss World" competi tion. "Miss U.S.A." contest rules stipulated that entrants must be between 18 and 20 years of age and single. (UPI Telcphoto) Queen Elizabeth Praises U.S. Ties in Parliament Address London ftlPD Queen Eliza beth II said in a colorful, centuries-old ceremony open ing Parliament today that Britain's alliance .with the United Stales was a mighty force for peace. The 34-year-old monarch, rridiunt in royal, robes and Willi Prince Philip at her side, said the improvement ox reia tions between East and West remained a primary object of hep government. Powerful Element Reviewing the ties that bind the United Kingdom and America, she said: "The friendship which links us to our great ally, the United Stales, is a powerful element In the defense of peace." Throngs of spectator's crowded in the mall and around Westminster, site of Britain's Parliament build,- lr.gs, to see the queen arrive The scene was ablaze with color the scarlet and gold uniforms of the queen's body. guard, His silver and gold trappings of the household cavalry, the state coach and brilliant ermine-trimmed red robes of the peers. The queen was escorted in a processsion into the great House of Lords and delivered her bpeech from the golden throne. Foreign diplomats crowded into ambassadorial boxes. The purpose of the queen's speech is to put forth an out line of the coming legislative program of the government in power. It is written for her by the prime minister and his ad visors. "Throughout the coming session my government will continue to give resolute sup port to the work of the Unit ed Nations," she said. "The improvement of relations be tween East and West remains a primary object of its policy. "In particular, it will go on working for the success of the Geneva conference on the dis-1 most to achieve coinprchcn continuance of nuclear wea- sive disarmament under effec pons tests and will do Its ut-ltive International control." Buying Wave Sends Many Stocks to Higher Ground New York -(UP)-Slock mel an eariy wave of buying to day that carried, electronics, cameras, steels, chemicals and many specials Into higher ground. Steel issues attracted the bargain hunters to show gains of a half or more in Republic, U.S. Steel, trading ex-divi dend, and Youngstown. Na tional Steel stood out in this department with a gain of more than 2. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York-Uil'luDow Jones final stock averages: 30 in dustrials 580.36. up 2.44; 20 railroads 125.07, off 0.64. 15 ullities 92.54, up 0.02. and 65 stocks 193.73 up 0.29. Salei Monday were about 2.46 million shares compared with 2.49 million ihares Friday. is u s , 44 Nfll'l Biscuit New York Central Vac Gnu St Eleu ... crnn I1H 104 Penney. J. C 4 Hi Itndio Corporation 30 -Ji. HU'hfifld Oil 82 Salewny , 3S lj Seiir 507k Shell Oil 37ii Soeony Molill Oil Southern Co Southern pneiite Standard CaliTorntH . Standard Indiana Standard NJ Sun Ml net Texan Co Texas Gulf Sulfur Texan Par Land Trust Trnnsnmerica Trans World Air Tri-continental Union Carbide Union Paoille Union Aircraft . United Air Unci U. S. Huliber U. S. Steel Younftntown S & T ... 44 . R07fl , lSli . 15'3 . 23 . II3 . Xi'i 111 . 25 . 37 li . 31 72l 8.V3 fiS'j . 32 Monday's prlcei on itltcted sioexs: Alum Co Ant American I an .. American Motor. AT&T Anaconda Copper An wo bieel Bendix Corp Bethlehem Me el Boeing Air Caterpillar Corp. ...... Chrvsier Corn Continental Can Crown .fllerhach Curtis WrlKht Dow Chemical ... Ou Pool Knstiniin Kodak . , Firestone General f nodi General Motors Georgia Paeifle Graham Paige , Grevltound , Guir on Homesiake Mining Idaho Power 1 It M. Int. Paper Johns Manvllle Kaiser lnd. Kenneeott Copper .... Lockheed Aircraft .. Montana Power . ... Montgomery Ward ... :t:t ... 4:n4 ... m'B ... ...182 ...Hi::-', ... 33'. ... 2', ... 42 ... 47 .. 1 ... 20 1, .. 2H', .. 474 .. 30 .511 Nixon To Vote In California Philadelphia - IUPII - Vice President Richard M. Nixon today left the definite indica tion that he plans to wind up his grueling home stretch campaign swing with a flying trip to California Tuesday, Nov. 8. lo vote in person. Nixon's schedule earlier called for him to be back in Washington next Monday night for a wlndup campaign telecast with President Eisen hower and to remain in the capital city Tuesday after hav ing cast a California absentee ballot. But in a Ridgewood, N. J., speech Monday night Nixon kicked off his final week's campaign plans, including a back-breaking swing to Alas ka Sunday, and declared that he would return to California Tuesday to vote. High Above the Valk) in a quiet non-residential area North Phoenix Road ILLCRESTAPARK Phone SP 3-6162 or SP 2,7111 Involvement of Communists Seen As Tensions Rise Paris - (DPI) - The bloody Moslem war aimed at wrench ing Algeria from France roar ed into its seventh year today in an atmosphere of rising tensions and growing involve ment of the Communist bloc. President Charles de Gaulle, swept to power more than two years ago in high hopes he could end the costly conflict, 'found himself today as far from ever from a solution and his regime threatened from both left and right. French army Gen. Raoul Salan, ordered out of Algeria last month for criticizing De Gaulle's policies, went lo Spain Monday and there was some fear he would try to Ket to North Africa and rally the European settlers trying to keep Algeria French. Fcrhat Abbas, premier of the Algerian nationalist move ment, just returned from trips to Moscow and Pciping seek ing aid, said in a broadcast from Tunis Monday he had re ceived promises of full sup port from Communist bloc and Arab stales. He said French conditions had wiped out any chance of a cease-fire. In Algiers, French officials repeated De Gaulle's offer of "self -determination" for Al gerians, but only after the rebels lay down their arms. The rebellion already has taken a toll of more than 150, 000 French and Moslem lives and is bleeding France's econ omy to the tune of a billion dollars a year. The war was touched off on Nov. 1, 1054, by a group of 150 Moslem nationalists who conspired at a farmhouse in the Aures Mountains south of Constantine. 'i : :m Li.!-' - ,!.; R 1 K if JOSEPH CORBETT JR. Legal Barriers Waived (HIM Telriholo) Corbett Locked In Denver Jail Denver-lUPll-Joseph Corbett Jr., 32, accused kidnap-slayer of millionaire Adolph Coors 111, was flown here today in the custody of U.S. deputy marshals and immediately locked in the city jail. Corbett was whisked away from Seattle aboard a com mercial airliner by the fed eral authorities without ad vance notice. Even two Colorado officials who were in Seattle to ques tion Corbett and ostensibly lo take custody of him were caught by surprise and did not know of Corbett's transfer until he was aboard the air liner. Corbett wai arraigned at Seattle Monday on a 'federal charge of unlawful flight lo avoid prosecution and remain ed in custody under $100,000 bond. He waived extradition to Colorado. i He had been on the most j wanted lists of both the FBI , and the Royal Canadian i Mounted Police until captured ' Saturday in Vancouver, B.C. Canadian authorities quickly turned him over to the FBI. Appling Would Avoid Duplication in Printina Mailina of Voter Pamphlet ... -nttia-. .1 Ihol-nnnnnantc Ctllltt fllP thill SOVOne WOUll jLlbllC' avtay a. 11,1.11 ujjjvih.iho, u..... .- United Press International Secretary of State Howell Appling Jr. said today he would ask the next legislature to amend the law to avoid duplication in printing and mailing of Voters Pamphlets which he said cost taxpayers about $60,000 each election year. . He said under existing law his office is required to mail Kennedy Scoffs at Social Security Proposal by Nixon Los Angeles - IUPII - Sen. John F. Kennedy scoffed at Vice President Richard M. Nixon's proposal for expan sion of the Social Security system today as "the greatest escape act since Houdini." ' The Democratic presidential candidate kept up a taunting attack against his Republican rival as he flew here to begin a final two-day bid for Cali fornia's 32 key electoral votes. 17-Slale Tour Kennedy headed into Cali fornia following an arduous four days of plugging for the same number of electoral votes in Pennsylvania, one of the major industrial states where Kennedy and Nixon both concentrated their ef forts in the final weeks of the campaign for the presi dency. Kennedy's staff announced that today's California swing starts a 17-state lour which "will cover more states in the final week of the campaign than any other presidential candidate in history." Adds New Stops They issued a statement saying Kennedy has "ordered intensification of his campaign in the final week" even though he has been "encour aged by the developments of the campaign in the past weeks." Kennedy's aides said "stops have been added to the sched ule in California, Texas, Vir ginia and Massachusetts." They also said he would visit Michiean and New Jersey, two states not previously scheduled for the final week. Without giving city-by-city details, the announcement said Kennedy "will visit Cali fornia, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, New York, Connecticut, New Jer sey, Vermont, New Hamp shire, Rhode Island, Maine and Massachusetts in the final seven days." Policies Reversed In a speech prepared for delivery at a clothing workers rally here, Kennedy said that Nixon's "position paper" two days ago calling for Social Se curity improvements "revers ed the consistent policies of 25 years of Republican lead ership." Ketell's FHA Ban Ordered Lilted Portland -IUPII- Oscar Ped erson, state director of the Federal Housing Administra tion, said today the FHA has lifted its ban on participation of the Ketell Construction Co. in the FHA's insurance pro gram. The FHA imposed the ban in 1958 but Pederson did not reveal the reason. Ketell said that when at torneys checked over the case they said to the FHA officials in effect "you have no case against this man, Ketell, clear him." the pamphlets to every regis tered voter. "The result is that every voter in every house hold gets a copy. A voters Pamphlet is mailed U both the husband and wife and lo each of their voting-age chil dren who are living at home. He said ". . . it seems to me that the duplications under the present law are unneces sary arm a needless waste of tax money. Part of Program Appling, a candidate to suc ceed himself, called the pro posal part of a continuing ef fort to reduce expenses witlw out impairing government services. He spoke in Portland, 'Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton, seeking reelection, also spoke in Portland and called for a consumer and in vestor protection unit in state government, "preferably i the attorney general's office. He said he believed there should be a voluntary com mittee of housewives with rep resentatives in every county serving on a voluntary, unpaid basis at the request of the at torney general to alert the proposed Bureau of Consumer Frauds and Protection in the attorney general's office to "fraudulent and illegal prac tices. He also called for a statewide advisory group on consumer and investor prob lems. Durno Speaki Republican opponents of Reps. Charles O. Porter and Al Ullman continued to fire Sen. Edwin Durno, GOP nom inee in the 4th district, said in Coos Bay Monday that he did not accept Porter's "self-defi nition as 'the best informed man in Congress on Latin America and disarmament'." He said that in his opinion Red Skelton or Danny Kaye might make a much more ef fective goodwill ambassador to Latin American countries. Ron Phair, the Klamath Falls Republican opposing Ull man, chided his opponent in Ontario Monday. He said Ull man had an editorial reprint ed which said in part ". . . for all his capacity in getting the job done for his district and for his general sound and intelligent application to na tional and world problems that come up before Congress he would normally have no opposition for reelection." Phair said "My opponent ob viously agrees with the editor ial, and it is inconceivable to ly stale that he had reached such a degree of perfection that no one fhould dare to op pose him, even if he thought so privately." TUNIS Harold Baxter Blind piano tuner Sponsored by the Jack son Council of the Blind wilt be in this irea the week of November 6th If interested call SP 3-1973 References furnished Vote for Proven Ability ELECT JERRY SCANNELL DISTRICT ATTORNEY Scannell for Dist. Ally. Comm., Mary Margaret Mullen, Sec, Campbell Rd., Medford, Ore. 3 Medford Tribune Regional Edition Airplane Crashes i At McMurdo Sound ! C'hristchurch, New Zealand -aiPH-A U.N. Navy Super Con- ' stellation making a magnetic survey crashed Monday while landing on an ice runway al Antarctica's McMurdo Sound, it was announced today. Right of the 22 men aboard were injured. They were flown back to Christchurch by another Super Constellation and four were hospitalized. The crash, caused when a i landing uear collaosed. shear- - ed the left wing and cracked the fuselage but the extent of damage to valuable equip-! ment aboard was not determ PageJ VDV. Starts TONIGHT NOVEMBER 1st -7:30 P.M. 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