PAGE t HERALD AND EVACUATION FORCED BY CRASH The engine and 12 cars of a Missouri-Pacific freight, derailed after colliding with a truck, are shown in this aerial view of the scene at Eldorado, Ark., Friday. The 1,200 residents of the town were evacuated for fear of a chemical explosion. . UPI Telephoto Pakistan Warned Chinese Pact Threat To India Talk WASHINGTON (UPI) Thel ..United Stales Saturday warned Pakistan its plan to sign a bor- tier aereement with Red China this week might endanger deli cate negotiations with India on the explosive Kashmir Issue. Diplomatic, informants said Sec retary of State Dean Rusk voiced concern on this issue during a one-hour conference with Paki Stan Ambassador Azii Ahmed. Rusk summoned Ahmed to the State Department last Saturday afternoon to discuss several sun- iccts and to express the fear felt bv President Kennedy and other administration officials of anything which might jeopardize the Indian-Pakistan negotiations: on Kashmir. Ahmed told newsmen afterward hf, and Rusk discussed "Pakistan Indian relations, Pakistan-U. S relations and Kashmir." He declined to provide any de tails. Stato Department press officer Lincoln White 6aid Rusk and Aziz discussed the "Kashmir prob lem." Other sources said the United Town Saved From Slide NAPLES, Italy IUPI Res cue crews Saturday apparently saved one town from a S million ton mud and rock slide that liad threatened to push it into tlie sea. but other villages remained in danger. Metal nets, stockade type fences and abandoned buildings! were being used as emergency defense lines against the slides, which followed heavy rains all along the Sorrento Peninsula south of here. Workers said it was "almost certain" that the town of Nerano evacuated several days ago, now could be saved. They managed to divert much of the mud and rock into a channel leading to the sea But at nearby Caposele, a huge boulder known as the "Rock ol the Ogre" threatened to crash down on the village from an over hanging cliff. Thirty houses di rectlv below the rock were evac uated At Foggia. men threw up metal nets to keep a mudslide from sweeping over a main highway. Another slide tliat forced the abandonment of Ctisana Mutri near Renevenlo to the east of Naples Friday was being slowed down by emergenry barricades. Hut b;id weather with flash rain storms hindered work, and the area reported do;ens of new slides, one of which wined out an aqueduct supplying tliree towns IWSCH WOTS t ROBIRI WISC WfSfNT mm swMEY mum mvm WWHSlON "t m OPINS :4J NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. 9? States was concerned that Pakf stan Foreign Minister '. A. Bhut to's plan to visit Peking next week and formally sign tlie bor der pact might imperil current Indian-Pakistan efforts to find some solution to the Kashmir dis pute. It was emphasized that tlie United Slates did not object to terms of the agreement, since Pakistan is a sovereign nation. But concern stems from the tim ing of tlie signing, on the eve of another round of Indian-Pakistan Kashmir talks, the secrecy shrouding the terms of the pact and the fact that the foreign minister himself is making thel trip. Husk apparently did most uf tlie talking. He was understood to have told Ahmed that the Tit j- 'V:- j. , ..... f" ' j.,'- ., '"S ' , M -i . ... I.. H r" ..-V .:. - ! kurk' . 111 a n nl m MUTE WITNESS A child's charred hobby horse stands silently in burned out wreck aq of a home in which a family of ten, includlnq eight children, died in Morehouse, Mo., Friday. Dead were Paul D. Seville, his wife, Shirley, and children Paul Jr., 10, Glenda Sue, 9, Hester, 8, Everett Lee, 7, Alvie Dale, S, Michael Lynn, 4, Henderson Eugene, 3, and Zelda Mae, 4 months, . UPI Telephoto Reno Doctors Seek Of Drug Addict's Hospital RENO, Nov. rri A srcMip of Rpnn norlnrs has askrn for nr invcstiRjlinn into (hp l;ukerounH financing am nictluU of Syn.i linn, nn orcni7.;uion ursiciirtt lor iTh;ihtlit;itmil of dnii! Jidilu ts. The nrtion t'.nno M n nvpfhik! of llio Vslioo County Mcdiral Sm-irly when indi idn.i pliysicinns HMHicslt'd (ho MX'irly to iisk thr (iiiiml Jury ti loik into lw nun tor. Tito Rrwirtl of Ilirivtois tixik ENDSTUESDAY INVINCIBLE. ..INDESTRUCTIBLE! it wis mil nisi Kn ntrr wutron TIKI 0U1 mmmi Monday, February 35, 1963 4.i United Stales is deeply concerned lest either India or Pakistan do anything that might upset the delicate Kashmir negotiations. India has said Pakistan's sign ing of the agreement would be an "unfriendly" act because ill involves giving away certain areas In Kashmir while India still contends she has a claim to the entire stale. The princely state of Kaslimir has been in dispute between In dia and Pakistan since both na tions Iweamc Independent in 1!M7 after a period of warfare. India now holds about two thirds of the province, including tlie famed vale of Kashmir. The one third held by Pakistan has a 300-mile border with Red China. This is where adjustments werel agreed to with Peking. . : . VA ' "..V .tfw' I . vfl. 4 r thp rrqnot undrT advisomcnl So fipty rrrsidrnl Dr. Konnpth Mar lxan said any statement now uould hp "prematura" Ho said his information about the oipani at ion was "Irparsay." Syiianon, fnundetl altout five voai s nuo in Smitfl Momea, Calif., Iws sot up a branch office here nd is also unrkini at llto Stato P-ion and Childini s honio. It lias boon pndorsoi by Mnpra! state officials, iiuludini dov dram Muver. its leailors aroi aktn tho stato lrnislalui'P (or a VtfUH! appropi i,itun to umtinuo tho work at tin1 prison Tho resolution presented to the MH'iely said opsilion in Califor nia to S nation was not penorally known in this area. It included iho'-e oiiits Tho hay distiitl of the Los Angeles Motlii-al Av-wiation, an oi caniwition iopresontinii 700 phy- icians. pissed a rosolution stal- KUmtlh raltft. Oftffffi ! Pwklnhtd dv (! lit ) Hl IvAtfa? tflrvint Sffu'riorn Orvtflft nd hMirtirn Clifrni kv Klimitx PuMnhiBfli Cnanv Mam at liplcnart Pfcon TUiM (ill W. t. lwtiatl. fuiikr flntarM tu mantr at TH tt a'Mta l K Urum P M, Orfn n wwtl 1, 1M. wntfar act t Ca frait. Marc 1 ' cenrt tlan 4t at Bjitf a) KlamMn Pitii. Or fan, and al additional maiiixfl tftrcai. Carritr t h'anfh I 1 tl I hflnlh ft M t Vif Ml M Wail In AtfviMl I MttMtlt ) f Maxlht ttM 1 Vlir IN Carnar 4 Da'rt rVfJtY A (uMiv. v Itr UNITfiD INTaNTlOHL Aumr luirtu a cumulation Sufttcrikvr nt rtivinf tfahvtrv Army Plans Repair Ship For Copters .WASHINGTON 'UPI' - The Army is considering use of an aircraft carrier as a floating re pair shop lo keep its helicopters flying in tlie war against Commu nist guerrillas in South Viet Nam. The proposal was advanced at the highest Defense Department level alter a recent trip to the South Vietnamese fighting front by Cien. Larle Ci. Wheeler, Army chief of staff, Wheeler conceded on his return here that "the problems of heli copter maintenance are large." About a thu d of the craft are out of action for serving most of the time. Army headquarters confirmed that the carrier repair shop plan was under study after the Army Times, a service journal, said the battle scarred U.S.S. Langley might be used for that purpose. The 20-ycar-old, 11 thousand ton carrier, under the name La fayctte, has been serving in the French Navy since 1951 hut lsl being returned to the United Stales. : She is due back in Philadelphia March 5. If the plan is adopted, the Langley or another vessel pre sumably would be stationed in a South Vietnamese port or in slid tered waters near that country with a complement of 1000 to; 2000 men, including repair spe cialists. The Langlcy's normal comple ment is 159 officers and 1.410 men. It won nine battle stars, survived a bomb hit that pene trated its forward deck, and shot klown 119 enemy planes in the Pacific during World War II She is now obsolete as a major fighting ship. Along with a sister vessel, the Belleau Wood, the Langley was transferred to France under the mutual defense assistance grant, aid program in tlie early 1950s when the French expeditionary corps was still deeply involved in Indn-China. it mm r Probe nig it was not in favor of Syna- non. The lo Anqoles Boaid of Pa role- Commissionprs agreed ii March, to prohibit parnlepi from umiih the facilities of Syna non. A oil ions commitiee, appoint- ed hy tlie Santa Monica City Council, rppirted Svnanon is not an nsot to the city. Charles Hamer. S nation's resi lent director in Nevada, told I 'nitcd Press International hp would welcome an invest Ration bv anv croup. "(hir dixy's are always open.' Hamer s.ud " We had opposition in Santa Monica several vears ago but a growing number of peo ple hae now inmp to aceept us. The opposition to our group ir Calitoinia has mottv faded awav now that (HMple are seeing tin results " He thai god tho John Mu ch So ciety was behind the request for n investuation s handled It. 227. 2 J7 w u p oiilei s duiing V tlSmiHEKOST! ..... VINCENT BOUSQUET V. Bousquet Heads Log Conference Vincent W. Bousquet, woods manager of Weyerhaeuser Com pany's Klamath Falls branch, is the now president of the Sierra Cascade Logging Conference. He was elected by the organization's board of directors on the first day of this year's conference held re cently in Redding and Anderson, Calif. Warren Carleton of the Winton Lumber Company in Martell Calif., became vice president, and Lloyd D. Wambold of Redding was reelected secretary-treasurer. New directors, elected to two- year terms, are Roy Berridge of the Diamond National Lumber Company in Red Bluff and Tom Taylor of Norlh Folk. Calif., man ager of the Norlh Fork unit of the American Forest Products Cor poration. Outgoing president Jack S. Bcr ry of Sacramento also will serve on the board. Bousquet, a native of North Da kota, graduated from the Univer sity of Minnesota in 1937. He joined the Weyerhaeuser Company 1943 and was transferred to Klamath Falls in 1952. Nat Giustina of Eugene, presi dent of the National Lumber Man ufaclurers Association, gave the kcynole addres In his comments on today s economy, he said. Operating a sawmill wisely and trying for a profit or even a break-even point make strange bedfellows. Giustina reviewed the logging ndustry's recent efforts to cooper ate with the I'.S. Forest Service in improving national forest tim ber sales procedures. The three-day conference fea tures talks and panel discussions by leaders of the forest products industry and an extensive mobile equipment show. FIRST IN 40 YEARS MERIDIAN, Miss. 'ITU - L. . i Mack i McAllister, chairman of the stale Young Republicans Club, Tucsd.iy became the first Republican in almost 40 years lo lie oleclcd lo the Mississippi Leg- slature. .... .j -Him '4 --''" .. ,K f&mm1,Sf$Z'-.i i 1 lir's tf igsjugjUj IN When you compare Lark'i price with 12 competitors, you'll think somebody made a mistake. We like it that way. ,. and so wiHjrou. Lark V8 prices actually start '275 LESS than tht FA1RLANE 500 '522 LESS than the BUICK SPECIAL DE LUXE '282 LESS than the DODGE 330 '24.1 LESS than the PLYMOUTH SAVOY Reds S&ir" Friendship ifh China MOSCOW ( UPI The Soviet Union and Communist China made major friendship gestures Saturday in an apparent effort to heal then- quarrel before it splits the Communist bloc. In Moscow Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko played host to Chinese Ambassador Pan Tsu-Li for what was described as a "warm and friendly" lunch meet ing. I Simultaneously in Peking, Communist Chinese party chief Mao Tse-Tung received Soviet Ambassador S. V. Shevervonenko for what Peking radio described as a "cordial lalk.' ) Both moves came in the wake of a rocket-brandishing speech by Soviet Defense Minister Rodion Malinovsky which was interrupted here as a sign that Moscow may be swinging toward Peking's "tough line" with the West in an effort to better its relations with Rod China. Malinovsky, speaking Friday to an audience that included Pre mier Nikita S. Khrushchev. claimed that any American attack on Castro Cuba would touch off a third world war in which "the entire system of capitalism wi be buried once and for all." The Soviet defense minister's warning was the most sternly worded threat by the Soviets since the Cuban crisis last au tumn and constituted one of the strongest commitments of Soviet military support to Cuba yet made. Western diplomatic circles in Moscow interpreted the speech as a Soviet shift toward the Peking line and a notice that the Kremlin no longer considers itself at a disadvantage because of its rocket pullout from Cuba. Western diplomats here have speculated the Russian's similarly unyielding line at the disarma ment talks now being held in Geneva also might be a sign of Moscow's apparent effort to prove itself as good at "fighting against imperialism as Red China No details were available here either on Gromyko's meeting with the Chinese ambassador or on Mao Tse-Tung's talk with the Soviet ambassador in Peking. The meeting reported from Peking was the first such high level encounter between spokes men from the two nations since Khrushchev made his call for a truce in the Sino-Soviet dispute in a speech to the East German Communist Party congress last month. Found Innocent PENDLETON UPl - John Pcna. 36. Umanine. was found in- nocenl of second degree murder by a Circuit Court jury here Fn- lay. Pena was charged with the fatal stabbing of Manuel Alvarado o( Walla Walla Jan. 1 at Milton-Free- alor. Mil r. . . l Jr ,1k t u I 7.f w xt - -? ' . .-Av.,. ''".-ib ,.;a iinyiirm'irirniiiifiinri THE LOWEST - AMERICA -'1 $$m$ . ckX 'ttiMMlf safe' iiVi LEARNING TO DO This is the first phase of the Future Farmer of America motto. FFA is the national organiiation of, by, and for farm boys studying vocational agricul ture in public secondary schools which operate under the provisions of the National Vocational Education Acts. Tulelaka High School Agricultural Engineering class re ceives instruction in tractor maintenance from instructor Robert Bosfer, center front. Left, front, is Clinton Hall, right, Paul Graham. Back to camera, Bob Peterson. Rear, left to right, Dennis Oman, Don Musselman, Jerry Wooten and Richard Gatliff. Low Blow At Press CHICAGO (UPH - American culture took a great leap back ward Friday when the first an nual exhibition of non-American painting and sculpture opened at the Chicago Press Club. The militant Fine Arts Commit tee to Preserve Fine Arts Com mittees sponsored the show ir which Chicago newsmen and oth or sundry artists taxed all sensi bilily. Glyplothecas and Boston baked beans highlighted the exhibition. judged by art critics of three Chi cago newspapers and the Art In stitute. The grand prize a papier ma- che polar bear named Morris pur chased from Goodwill Industries for $2.45 was awarded to free lance writer and photographer Art Shay for his dramatic work "Doo mobile." Shay's entry was a sinister bomb suspended precariously over a model of Chicago's cylindrical apartment building Marina City. Fabrics stay soft . . . water rolls right off garments treated with our new. . . SANITONE US KtltPLlLlLLll CASCADE Laundry & Cleaners Opp. Pest Office Ph. 4-5111 er 2-2531 BROADWAY CLEANERS 4611 So. 6th Ph. 4-6403 PRICED V8 IS NAMED 90 LESS than the RAMBLER CLASSIC '395 LESS than the AMBASSADOR 880 '399 LESS than the METEOR CUSTOM '363 LESS than the FORD 300 '311 LESS than the METEOR STD. '333 LESS than the 0L0SM0BILE F85 '187 LESS than the FAIRLANE STD, '285 LESS tfun the TEMPEST STD. Batters Culture Club Exhibition Fame notwithstanding, many critics observed privately that other entries possessed as much drama and acumen as Shay s win- ner. A special "unseen award" was presented to the staff of Chicago Scene magazine because their e.v hibit would not fit into the eleva Managed News Claim Backed WASHINGTON iUPD - A vet eran Washington correspondent charged Saturday President Ken nedy flatters reporters, commen tators and editors as a means of managing news and is more ynical. bold and subtle in his control than any president before him. Arthur Krock. chief of tlie New York Times Washington bureau for the past 21 years, made the charges in an article for Fortune Magazine. New Method CLEANERS 1453 Eiplonode Ph. 4-4471 Thai'i only the btglnnlngl ou can poer your Lark with even riotter V8 choices like the super charged Avanti R2. which racked up 132 mph at Bonneville recently. Whatever you're looking for in a V8 the meipensive ones or the hot ones you'll find them at your Studebdker dea'er'j. Come see! 0StudelDakef AUTOwOTtVf tor which serves the roof garden press club. Henry Rago. editor of Poetry magazine, took the "most literary award" for his stunning contem porary work an empty picture frame. Jlliii n: v i I BEEFEATER BEEFEATER the imported English Gin that doubles your martini pleasure UnequalUd since 1S20 BEEFEATER GIN 94 PROOF 100 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS KOBRANO CORPORATION . NEW YORK 1, N. Y. tAlf COtPOHATtOH a irair MfH 4 Htm. f)la TUtfM H1l ftrr I PM,