China Commies Insist On Summit Conference TOKYO (UPD - Communist China insisted Saturday that a Communist summit conference is essential if ideological differenc es between Peking and Moscow are to be ironed out. The Chinese underscored their position by giving front - page headlines to the speech made in Berlin by Wu Hsiu chuan, the Peking regime's delegate to the East German Communist parly congress. Wu caused an uproar of booing and catcalls at the congress Fri day by attacking Russia and Yu goslavia, and rejecting Soviet Premier Nikila S. Khrushchev's call for a truce in the ideological quarrel that has divided the Com munist world. The New China News Agency, in a broadcast monitored here said all of Peking's newspapers printed Wu's speech on their front pages Saturday. The text also was carried by the news agency. It was not published in Berlin, and virtually all Western newsmen were barred from the Congress. Sources of Support The statement by Wu made it clear that China calculated it would find supporters at such a conference from Asia. Africa and Latin America to outvote Russia and its East European satellites. Wu. who is regarded as one of Red China's principal experts on Russian affairs, stressed that "national and democratic revolu tionary movements are engulfing Asia, Africa and Latin America." His speech deliberately passed over Russia's achievements in nu clear armament, rocketry and Union Shop Vote Slated WASHINGTON (UPH - The Boeing Co.'s union workers will vote next Wednesday on the com pany's latest offer to end a six- month dispute over the union shop. It is likely to be rejected. A week of intensive discussions between the company and the In ternational Association of Machin ists on a new contract for 30,0001 union members ended without ap parent progress. The IAM agreed to submit Boe ing's latest offer to a vote of the full membership, and deferred a strike deadline of midnight Fri day night until after the secret balloting is held. But P. L. Siemiller, 1AM vice president, called the offer "com pletely unsatisfactory." He sug gested referring all unresolved is sues to final and binding arbitra tion, but he said Boeing refused to do this. Lowell P. Mickclwait. a Boeing vice president, said the aircraft and missile manufacturer had not replied to the LM suggestion, but indicated it would be rejected. The IAM has asked for a union shop, which would make union membership mandatory for all cmoloves. Boeing employes voted 3-1 last month for the union shop! in balloting sponsored by the Na tional Labor Relations Board. A company spokesman said Boe ing was holding out for an agree ment which would give an em ploye 30 days to decide whether to join the union. Once in tne union, he would be required to re main for the duration of the con tract. Judqe Halts MD Hearing PECOS, Tex. lUPl' Dr. John P. Dunn succeeded Friday night in getting a district judge to block a hearing of the Reeves County Hospital Board, which met to de cide whether to reinstate the con troversial 35-ycar-oH John Birch Society member. Dunn, who asked the FBI to in- vestigate Billie Sol Estes, wanted the hearing halted on the grounds the board is prejudiced against him. District Judge Russell Austin of the 109th District Court in An drews. Tex., set a hearing on Dunn's motion for an injunction against the hospital board for 10 a.m. Jan. 28 in Pecos Dunn's lawyers, Fred Bennrrs of Dallas and Mark Smith ol Lubbock, went to Judse Austin because Jud:c .1. H. Slarley of Tecos was en route to the Itio Grande Valley on another .. The board fired Dunn without hearing Jan. 2. charging him wilh harrassmcnt of the hospital staff. Dunn said the Estcs case did not enter into the situation and insisted he w as dismissed because of politics. Ji a ' ? K i , 'Coui-tO'Cxut NEWSPAPERS SELL THE MOSI! space exploration with the single mention that "the socialist camp is growing stronger every day.' Destiny of West "Imperialism is a decadent force historically destined to ex tinction. Wu declared. He went on to imply that a nu clear war between Russia and the United States was virtually ruled out because neither the Russian nor the American leaders want to commit their nations to certain destruction. In this situation, Wu said, re peating a Chinese tenet, "man is the decisive factor in the struggle against imperialism." Wu paid tribute to the "heroic- Cuban people," and implied that the real advance of international communism in the nuclear age would be carried on by subver sion, terrorism, sabotage, infiltra tion and guerrilla war. Reservists Scheduled In Pay Hike WASHINGTON (CPU Defense Secretary Robert S. Mc.N'amara's military pay raise proposals, to be submitted to Congress this week, will exclude more than two- thirds of the nation's one million civilian reservists. Defense officials said Saturday that about 100.000 officers and more than 163,000 enlisted men in the National Guard and other reserve outfits are scheducld to get the increased pay, because they arc rated as volunteers. But another 33,000 officers and 628.000 enlisted men now on the civilian military payroll, will be omitted, because they have a compulsory legal obligation for service in the reserves. The exclusion plan was first disclosed in President Kennedy's budget message to Congress earlier last week. But the step had been recommended earlier by Mc- Namara and a Defense Depart ment panel which studied mili tary compensation. The mammoth pay raise first in five years for the armed forces would average 14.4 per cent and cost $1.7 billion a year. Chief beneficiaries would be the 2,700 000 regular servicemen where the payroll has already climbed to $6.7 billion a year. The civilian military payroll is $75 million annually. This would be increased between $28 and $32 million by the partial raises the department is recommending. An across-the-board inclusion of the reserves in the new pay sched ulcs would cost probably $40 mil lion more. Most of the civilians on drill- pay status at present draw pay at the going rate for about 60 days a year. They are credited with one each day for 48 weekend drills annually, and usually attend summer camps for two weeks ol additional drill. Under the new plan, setting up a dual pay standard, men with reserve obligations will continue to be paid under schedules es tablished in 1958. The proposed increases have not been an nounced in detail, but the Air Force Times said they will amount to about a dollar a day for enlisted men in the reserves. The increase for a corporal, for example, would be from $3.66 to 56.66 a day. Now at Miller's! Waitress i Skirts V:f Block Nylon I I Hi Straight I Flair I 11 Also in stock a l- -i '.&. l complete selection of 1. , -"i't-'-lf UNIFORMS by: I . U Bob Irani - Barco I White Swan i 1 TiHeny A I it) Wtitrtu A from . nJ Btlti in ttur Notioni Dfpt Animal Fair ACROSS 37 Auricle! 1 Dilrv tiumil 39 Toddlers 4 Femsle hone 40Huidla (PV.) 8" the cat" 41Cookinf utensil 12 Brew 2 Cotter 13 Above 15 Grade 14 Mirtian (comb. j?5I'ul tonn) 61 Top tuns 15 for "5ry 18 Deins' offices S3 Elevator 18 Considers . '",,n,,r. Kivn ctnniif 54 War eod 21 Long fish 65 Distribute 22 Oleagutoufl &6 Refute 24 Squall M Pi " M Peruvian Indian uunn 27 Presidential IKish nickname 30 Verily 32 Rapid run (music) 34 Perish with hunger 35 Muse of astronomr 36 spaniel 2 Bread spread 3 Week day Pattern 5 Asseverate 6 Motive 7 Sea bird 8 Mr. Fitzgerald 9 Silkworm 10 Dregs 1 12 13 14 15 6 7 IS 19 110 11 l 13 14 15 Tg 17 ' W 19 20 I 21 r"j22 23 " zT" 26 27 28 29" 53 r" 31 ""32" 33 35 36 f 37 38 Tj39 1 1 1 y 42 43 44 t" 4b 46 47 48 49 50 51 5F- """ 53 54" 55 56 57 I 21 fommunihj. MONDAY "ELIZA AND THE LUMBER JACKS," 7:30 p.m., final try-outs, Rowan Gets I Finland Post WASHINGTON (UPD - Carl T. Rowan, former newsman now serving as deputy assistant sec retary of state for public affairs, was named by President Kennedy today as U. S. ambassador to Fin land. Rowan, a Negro, was chosen to succeed Bernard A. Guflcr at Helsinki. The 37-ycar-old nominee, a na tive of Ravcnscrolt. Tcnn., was a reporter for the Minneapolis Star and Tribune prior to joining the State Department in 1961. He attended the University of Minnesota and worked briefly in 1948 for the Baltimore Afro Amer ican before returning to Minnea polis to join the staff of the Star and Tribune. He was cited by the Minneapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce as the city's "outstand ing young man of 1951." The U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce included him among "America's 10 outstanding young men of 1953." Rowan is the only newspaper man to have won three successive annual medallions from Sigma Delta Chi. the professional jour nalism society. Ship Change Contract Let . PORTLAND (UPD Willamette Iron & Steel Co. will get a $9.7 million contract for conversion of two Victory ships into technical research ships for the Navy, Sens Wayne Morse and Maurine Ncu bergcr said in a wire Tuesday. Work is expected to start next month. Answvr to Previous PuzxU 3j 11 Deprivation -17 Bakery item 19 Hinder 23 Sudden attack Imed.) 24 Main point 25 Preposition - 26 NoUons 27Canonry 28 Mine entrance 29 Pastures 31 Happening! 33 Polvnesian chestnut! 38 Rehearse -40 Stage whisper 41 Flower 42 Stuff 43 At this place 44 Exude 46 Roast of Krk iland 48 Masculine nickname 50 Turf QakndaJi Fremont School Auditorium, ors especially needed. Ten- KI.A.MATII CIVIC THEATRE, 8 p.m., Regular meeting, Mam- ath Auditorium dining room. Pub lic invited. NEIGHIIORS OF WOODCRAFT, 8 p.m., meeting, Evans Bldg., 10th and Main. BETHEL NO. 51. Job's Daugh- tcrs, 7:30 p.m., meeting, Henley Grange Hall. BETHEL NO. 61, Job s Daugh tcrs, 7:30 p.m., parents night Scottish Rite Temple. TUESDAY DEGREE OF HONOR, 7:30 p.m., executive meeting, tana Long, 4512 Crosby. ALOHA CHAPTER, Eastern Star, 8 p.m., stated meeting, Ma sonic Temple. WEDNESDAY SOJOURNERS. 12.30 p.m., Founders Day, luncheon meeting, W'illard Hotel. Cards following. Newcomers invited. KLAMATH DISTRICT GAR DEN CLUB. 10:30 a.m., execu tive meeting, City Library. Y-NE-MA TWIRLERS, 7:30 p.m., beginner square dance class, YMCA. Everyone invited. Beck's Newest... "wnrnwi mm -r-- fT ed Chin Atom Bomb Test Talked TOKYO d'Pli -American de fense officials believe Communist China has built two atomic bombs and will test them sometime be fore the end of the year, the! major Tokyo newspaper Mainichi reported Saturday. The Mainichi Shimbun said U.S. officials made the disclosure to the Japanese government at a meeting of the joint U. S.-Japan Security Consultative Committee in Tokyo. The Japan self defense agency denied the Mainichi report after it was published but the news paper's editors said their infor mation was correct and refused to withdraw the story. Mainichi said American mili tary men did not appear greatly alarmed over the Chinese acquisi tion of elementary atomic explo sives. "Japan and the United States agreed that even if the weapons were tested it would not affect the military situation in the Far East," Mainichi said. "No hasty change of military deployment in the area is necessary." However, the Americans were reported to have expressed con cern over the ctfecls on the Japanese public of a Chinese atomic test because of the emo tional and deeply rooted Japanese fear of atomic weapons. American officials wcie not im mediately available fur comment. Another Tokyo newspaper, the Tokyo Shimbun, last week pre dicted Chinese atomic tests dur ing 1963 and quoted sources in the Japan defense agency. Speculation over the emergence of Red China as a nuclear power comes at a time when Japan's role as supporter of the non-Com munist world is undergoing a thorough rcstudy, both in Tokyo and in Washington. During the last year there have been repeated hints from highly placed Japanese officials that Japan's defense policies would have to be revised if Cmna built atomic weapons. Mainichi said the security com mittee also discussed in detail re ports on Red China's nuclear arms capabilities. It said the committee discussed a report from the Japanese de fense agency that Red China has built four nuclear reactors, one of Ihcm near Peking and another in Chungking in Western China. It said U. S. officials stressed that the two atomic bombs were experimental and that it would be at least 10 years before Peking could develop nuclear bombs as a practical weapon. The symbol of the 1964 World's Fair in New York's Flushing Meadow is to be a huge open work globe of stainless steel, called a Unisphere. "Fresh as Butter Sweet as a Nut" It's a brand new process ... a spun loaf. You'll find a finer textured loaf that stays fresh longer; with a truly new, richer flavor! Try "Butter Nut" from Beck's . . . it's bread with a delicious new flavor your whole family will enjoy! LOOK FOR THE BRIGHT NEW YELLOW WRAPPER ON YOUR GROCER'S SHELVES'. Try all the fine products from BECK'S BAKERY HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath W4 N 4 HIV I BODIES RECOVERED Rescue) workers place body of a plane crash victim info a truck. The bodies of the three men were found Friday morning in the cold waters of tha Great Salt Lake after their West Coast Airline plane crashed Thursday. UPI Telephoto Negro Leader Raps Dirksen Move To Shelve Anti-Filibuster WASHINGTON (UPD A Negro, leader said Saturday that a move by Senate Republican leader Ev erett M. Dirksen to shelve a lib it anti-lilibustcr drive would be i disservice to the cause of civil rights. Roy Wilkms, chairman. of the "leadership conlcrence on civil Lie Detector Test Slated LOS ANGELES (UPD - Lie detector tests were proposed Fri day to 6olve a paternity suit in volving Terry Lynn Huntingdon, former Miss U.S.A. Attorney Sidney Williams for the 22-year-old beauty said ho would let the case "rise or fall" on the result of the tests, proposed for both Miss Huntingdon and Arthur J. Crowley, who was named in the suit. Crowley, also an attorney, la beled the move a "grandstand play," and 6aid, "I've got your client (Miss Huntingdon! cold in1 perjury and I'm going to take you to tlie grand jury. Williams then tlireatcned to take Crowley to the grand jury (or al legedly making love to Miss Hunt-j uigdon before she was 21 years. oia. Miss Huntingdon was chosen Miss U.S.A. in 1939. Last May 14 slic gave birth to a daughter, Eliz abeth Paige, w hom she claimed Crowley fathered. Crowley, 38, has denied the paternity charges. People Read SPOT ADS you ore now. Falls. Oregon Monday. rights." urged "all supporters ofl meaningful civil rights m the Sen ate" to oppose Dirkscn's effort to table and thus kill a motion to consider a modified debate curbing rule. Dirksen has served notice that ho will offer a tabling motion next week in hopes of ending thel Senate's current deadlock over the rules change. Wilkms, who also is executive secretary of the National Associ ation for the Advancement ofl Colored People (NAACP), said a statement that if Dirksen makes his motion, "he will be doing a disservice not only to the cause of civil rights but to those members of his own party who have sincerely joined in the anil filibuster move." He said the Illinois Republican 'will have earned for his party a pro-segregationist, pro discrimina-l lion label because a vole to shut off the rules fight "is a vote to bury civil rights" in the current Congress. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D- Minn., who favors changing the rule, said the drive would not be lied to civil rights or any other single Issue. "Such association tends to cloud the real issue and reflects on the integrity of the Senate," McCar thy said. "It implies that proce dural rights are not important and may be used for temporary advantage by shifting majorities or minorities. Sen. John J. Sparkman, D-Ala member of the southern bloc fighting the rules change, said in Car WAX & POLISH JOBS from . . $12.00 Sparkle Car Wash 4023 S. 6lh Ph. TU 4-5543 January !! 1963 PAGE J f f A Drive radio broadcast for southern stations that the present rule "is good rule and it lends prolec tion to the minorities." The rule requires a two-thirds majority of those present and vot ing to curb debate. The first showdown is expected on a mo tion to consider allowing three- fifths of those voting to halt a filibuster. A bipartisan group of liberals favors allowing a simple majority 51 of the Senate's en tire membership to end debate. Sparkman pointed out that un der the Senate's present party di vision the Democrats, if they wanted, could prevent the Uepub leans from debatuig if the rule were changed. now certainly, wo never would want that to happen but it just illustrates that sometimes there. might be a minority which has a jus! cause. Sparkman said. fiinmiiml W SiXnXLJ There's a RIGHT SIZE CUBS BIO r iwnnm YOUR PLUMBER OR Venezuela Art Theft Leader Held CARACAS. Venezuela (UPI) Police Saturday arrested Commu nist Jose Hilario Monterrey as Hie presumed leader of t h e band of armed robbers which stolo $660,000 worth of French paintings from the National Mu- seum of Fine Arts last Wednes day. None of the paintings, which were on loan from the Louvre and the Museum of Modern Art in Paris, has been recovered. Police have blamed the robbery on actiomsts of the Communist National Liberation Front. Thoy said the gun-slinging wom an who drove the get-away car . for the three robbers has been identified as Aura Reyes Chacin, and that one of the robbers was identified us Ruben Borges. Both -are still at large, as is the third and unidentified accomplice. Monterrey was arrested hiding in a peasant's shack about live miles west of Caracas. Lloyds of London, which had in sured the paintings for $1 million, I as offered a $10,000 reward for i.normation leading to their re covery. Borges, one of the Identified robbers, was recently discharged Irom the technical judicial police fi'r his affiliation with the Com munist Party. The woman alleg edly shot a youth before the ban d ts sped away from the museum with the paintings. An anonymous telephone call to ine museum said the paiptings were being well cared for but will not be returned until "the present state of (police) terror" is lifted. The museum was closed until further notice at tlio request of -nvcstigators. LIQUORS Op'n Kgndsjra 0:00 to fl:oe Wceltdsyt 8:00 Iq s:00 Jock's Super Market Tultlak, Calif. ' in automatic gae water heaksjoo So when you replace yours, remember fo- 1 Choose an automatic gas water heater big' enough to supply the oceans of hot water re quired by a growing fam ily, an automatic washer and a dishwasher. 2 Choose a make and model that carries a 10 year warranty plan. This assures qualityl 3 Insist on GAS Be cause gas heats water three times faster and costs lessl DEALER HAS YOUR SIZE TOTCALIFORNIA-PACIFIC , W UTILITIES COMPANY t'nii.iJi..i.iu.ii.ii-'uin.iJMJ:r.M:iug 1011 Main Your Gas Company TU 4-5173