Western Kansas Press (Newspaper) - November 9, 1963, Great Bend, Kansas PRESS CLOUDY THE MORNING GREAT BEND DAHY TRIBUNE STATE and AREA NEWS SPORTS FINAL MARKETS VOL. 3, NO. 54 GREAT ISSUE 8 PAGES SINGLE COPY PRICE Sc Area Football Hays 16, Cadets 6 Great Bend 18, City 13 Pawnee Rock 40, um 13 Lyons St. John 0 Pratt 7, Garden City 6 Ellsworth 21, Stafford 0 Chase 34, Holyrood 7 Larned 17, Kinsley 13 See page 5 Woman Dies In Two Car Crash Near La Crosse LA CROSSE An Alexander woman was killed and a dent of Bazine was seriously injured in a crash 11 miles of at the inter- section and a county Dead is Mrs. Clayton Wesley 47, the driver of the other car is listed in serious condition in Rush County Memorial hospital in La Hospital officials reported that Hagelgantz was suffering from fractured ribs and multi- ple internal It is still a possibility that he will have to undergo Hagelgantz is the owner of a that is in the process of being moved to Great Williams auto was bound on the county and the Hagelgantz car eastbound on Mrs. Williams was ed instantly on The car caught and was quickly Twenty One Die In Air Crash In Finland A Finnair DCS airliner with 24 Finns aboard crashed into a swamp forest area near here Friday flipped over on its back and caught one persons were killed and three Authorities said the dead in- cluded two children and the pi- lot and Two male sengers and stewardess Mari- anne Kullberg survived with in- juries and They were reported doing well in a The on an internal flight in was proaching Maarianhamina port on the Island of maa which lies between Sweden and Finland at the junction of the Baltic Sea and the Gulf of It fell less than a mile from the port. Officials said the pilot took off from Turku on the last 30- minute leg of a flight from Helsinki to Maarianhamina and had carried on a normal radio conversation with the island New York Robbery Nets Bandits Nearly One Million In Jewels J Af collision that resulted in the death of an ander Mrs. Clayton The wreck occurred 11 miles west of La Crosse Friday Also injured in the car collision was the Hagelgantz suffered fractured in Dean Rusk Speaks Out Against Congress Trying To Set Polity By STEWART HENSLEY i ments which impose a WASHINGTON of state Dean Rusk grily upbraided day for trying Congress to foreign through a ries of limiting amendments to the foreign aid The usually mild-mannered Rusk bristled openly w he n asked at a news conference about amendments being onto the foreign aid which would re- strict or deny funds to nations such as Egypt and flat ban on aid to continue to prohibit assistance to virtually bar help for and tions in Latin Rusk sharply noted that if things go wrong because of such President Kennedy rather than the House and Senate will be The Senate is the authorization approximately 40 amendments Rider On Amendments A coalition of aid critics day adopted place America who refuse to honor U.S. fishing Rusk's criticism drew an im- mediate retort from Sen. Wayne who termed him an and secretary of state but bluntly completely and totally disagree with him on In addition congressional to his attack on handling of the aid Rusk made these other major new government of South Viet Nam try and its people to a stepped up fight against Communist guerrillas and create an free and Harassment Is Soviet harassment of U.S. military convoys on the access highways is very serious because the situation could mushroom into explosive He observed that Soviet Premier Nikita chev showed realization of this in his recent remarks to ing U.S. Rusk said the United States and its Allies consider access to lin and although the autobahn incidents may seem to be elaborate they have very grave By CURRAN United Press International NEW YORK A ing gang of two dressed like policemen and three wearing Halloween day stole an estimated lion worth of jewels and napped six guards In perhaps the nation's largest such The being transported from the Exchange to a firm in lower white loot of rings and broaches had been cleaned repaired and were being returned for to their It took the one a sawed off only a matter of seconds to the delivery wagon carrying the jewels to the over- come the and The jewels were being re- ing returned by the AAA senger may put us out of a spokesman for the vice He refused other com- ment on from an insurance Black Sedan The working with like used a black dan and a black truck in the It took place on 41st Street and 12th Avenue along Manhattan's West Police converged on the area and quickly sealed it off with dozens of road but the gang had disappeared without a Chief of Detectives Lawrence W. Kearney said the messenger ager of the messenger was sitting in the front seat alongside driver Louis Moots of N. J. The other four were in the back with the Kearney said when the tion wagon turned on 4.1st a sedan that appeared similar to an unmarked police car pulled up along Moots and noted that the two inside were wearing men's Approach Messengers The phony policemen forced the station wagon to the One of them got out of the car and approached the thought we were being pulled over for a traffic But one of the and said is a At the same a black panel truck pulled the tion wagon blocking and a man with a Halloween mask over his face appeared on the other side of the station wagon with a sawed off The six guards were quickly ordered into the rear of the They were cuffed to a railing along the in- One of the bandits drove the black sedan two drove Ihe station wagon and the other two drove the panel truck three blocks away and it. Allies Send Convoys Without Any Trouble BERLIN Western Allies tested Soviet intentions Friday by dispatching British Capsule Report from UPI and local THE MARKET Stocks ished with their best gain of the week buoyed mostly by a bullish business news Complete financial page 4. BIG NIGHT Area football teams had another big with several conference races decided in the evening's Complete reports on page 5. THE WEATHER Clear to partly cloudy Highs in mid 70' with the lows night in the mid 30's. suddenly whipped out pistol French convoys to West Berlin over the 110-mile auto- bahn through Communist East The Russians cleared them without The Russians did not raise the issue of a troop headcount with either convoy Their in- that U.S. soldiers leave their trucks to be counted lier this week resulted in a 41- hour deadlock and caused a grave new cold war Soviet faced with lied solidarity in demanding cess to West processed the two convoys Friday in tine fashion at both the born and autobahn In identical diplomatic notes delivered the United Britain and France de- manded that ihe Soviet Union end its harassment of bound convoys and for The two convoys Friday were the first test of Soviet tions since the notes were The French convoy consisted 50 troops in 10 Not counting drivers and their the convoy had 30 fewer than the number necessary for according to Allied The challenged U.S. con- blockaded from 9 a.m. Monday until 2 a.m. had 20 The Allied procedure is to dis- mount voluntarily when convoys are carrying more than 30 service station wagon left the Exchange shortly be- fore 1 p.m. Max Okla. And Kansas Republicans Meet At Liberal sas and Oklahoma Republicans will gather here Saturday night for a fund-raising dinner turing Oklahoma Gov. Henry Bellmon as main It will be first at a major can meeting in Among those scheduled to at- tend the meeting were Kansas Gov. John U. S. Sen. U. S. And Reds Reach Agreement On Wheat James B U. S Rep. Bob and Atty. Gen. William M. became governor of this year first of his party to hold office since Oklahoma became a- A press conference for Pearson and is scheduled for 4 p.m. Saturday at the Warren The plate dinner will be held at port control tower almost until i 7. p.m. in Seward County the last agriculture WASHINGTON The United States and the Soviet Union reached a tacit under- standing Friday under which two and a half of U.S. wheat are expected to be sold to obstacle to the transaction was removed when the Commerce Department an- an agreement with U. S. shipping interests on how much they will charge to carry their share of the Approximately 50 per cent of the wheat was expected to be carried in American ships once the deal is This will not be rigidly if U.S. ships are not available to transport this share of the were reports that the first export license for grain to the would be issued either Saturday Evidence that the negotiating log jam was starting to also ment Commerce De- had granted license for tons of wheat to The Soviets were negotiating on a separate but the framework of the Hungarian deal was similar to the lines discussed by the earlier The department announced that approximately was involved in the Hungarian wheat including cost and The freight charge's in the transaction will be governed generally by the same formula which is used in setting rates for United States government Franklin D. undersecretary of estimated that approximately 50 per cent of the wheat be carried in American ships under this representatives of the various associations of can shipowners met with me this afternoon and I am pleased to announce they have ed the government's Roosevelt Sunshine Table Day Sept Oct. SS SR SR SS 15 7J7 H 5'22 5'23 31- are Great Bend rise and sunset To de- termine local add one minute for every 15 m e s subtract for every 15 miles PROOF OF OUR Rockefeller Says He Is Out For A Victory Byj United York Gov. Nelson A. ler opened the nation's first 1964 presidential campaign quarters Friday a- pledge io his a promise to all Republicans and another challenge to his probable The maxed a two-day stumping tour in southern New Hampshire for the ioui that was plagued by rain the time he arrived Thursday until he returned to New York Rockefeller pledged to a cheering band of 200' boosters that he would all the to get the 1964 GOP pres beginning with a determined campaign to win New Hampshire's the nation presidential primary next March 10. At the same time he that no matter who the Re- publican nominee he will have Rockefeller is selected oy the convention in Francisco will have my Rockefeller told the H was one of his est statements far in this In the past he has carefully questions Sen. Barry views differ LICENSE BUYING are pictured many of the hunters in the area and from out of state buying hunting licenses and upland bird stamps at a Great Bend According to sources in Great Bend most of the are at a northwest and southwest angle from Great Hunters from Kentucky and Kansas bought more than 250 licenses F day and has bought more than 900 licenses the past The of 'tis come from the Texas and Oklahoma Uncle Sam Pulls Equipment Out Of Bases On English Soil ing support for whose considerably from held by the now he has always said he would support a candidate that would be in line with a platform adopted by the By DARRELL United Press International WASHINGTON The United proclaiming its overwhelming nuclear ity over the Soviet an- Friday it is shutting down two Strategic Air Com- mand bases in England as the prelude to a major shift to sea and land missile change in U. S. strategic forces was made possible by the rapid growth of the Polaris submarine fleet and the Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles based on American a Pentagon an- The United States is expected to have nearly 500 ready to fire by the end of the Its Polaris each armed with 16 are be- ing produced at the rate of one a A dozen already are stationed in the Atlantic and the with 192 missiles able to penetrate the heart of the Soviet The Defense Department saic the closing of the two English bases of the Strategic Air Com mand will mean the re turn of 19 jet 22 tanker panes and can military personnel July 1. Additional Reductions Additional reductions in U. S. jet and air j transport units will be made during the next months in Brit- Spain and ing to informed sources in The two closing at Fairford and Greenham Com- will revert to the Royal Air Only two U. S. bases remain in at Brize Norton and Upper The 420lh Air Refueling Squadron at Sculthorpe in fold also will be Engineer Pleads Not Guilty In Trial Of Sniper Slaying By ALAN B. WAYNE Mass. A scholarly looking pleaded innocent .to a murder charge Friday in the sniper slaying of Benjamin M. a nationally known com- puter Police accused Allan N. 36, of bf shooting Gurley to death as the 38-year-old electronics en- gineer ate dinner Thursday night with his wife and seven ness picked up in Peabody five hours after the He was a former of was cd with murder after questioning by District Court Judge Otis M. Whitney ordered him held out bail for a hearing Nov. 22. Gurley was slain less than a month after he told police he feared for his Police said Gurley had with over a period of lime and had complained that Blumenthal had threatened to shoot described by ates as was killed by a single shot fired Ihe kitchen window of his est two-story home in this Boston