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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1953)
Mexican Plane Crash Kills 14 MONTERREY, Mexico (ffl-Res-cue parties struggled into rugged Devil's Back Canyon today to reach the burned wreckage of a government - owned plane that crashed Monday n route to the U. S.-Mexican fiesta . officially op ening the Rio Grande's Falcon Dam. Estimates of the number aboard ranged from the officially reported 14 believed to have been assigned Seats nn thn (uinn;nA T nn , virtue LiLd tU U or more. Two of those on the of- iicia; passenger list of 14 turned up elsewhere. ' It smashed into the side of the canyon, only about 15 miles from Cartridge Blows Up; One Killed, One Hurt ABERDEEN. Md. tftOn. m,n was killed and mother injured wnen a 120mm. cartridge blew up as they were removing nnivrW i from it Monday at the Aberdeen Proving Ground. An Army spokesman said Harry M. Jorgenson. 29. of Bel Air was ! killed and Noble H. Carter, 44, of Elkton, seriously hurt, as they I worked in an ammunition explo 1 sive assemblv and Him Am hi v j room. i Monterrey Airport. Search planes ; reported sighting no sign of life i around the wreckage. ' s - jS" Have a "irrf-- " "" i t J. S, Lieutenant Accused In Death Of Italian Major NOVARA Haly W A former Italian partisan testified Tuesday that a United ' States lieutenant engineered the slaying of his com manding officer "in order to be free to favor the Reds.1' The partisan, Aminta Migliarl, took the stand at the second day of the trial of two Americans and three Italians charged with the cloak-and dagger murder of Maj. William Holohan of New York City behind Nazi lines in northern Italy in 1944. The Americans, former Lt. Aldo Icardi of Pittsburgh, Pa., and for mer Sgt. Carl Lo Dolce of -Rochester, N. Y., are being tried in ab sentia. U.S. courts ruled they could not be extradited for prosecution in Italy. , : Migliari and two other wartime partisans, Giuseppe Mannini and Gualtieri Tozzini, are on trial in person. Migliari testified that prior to his death Holohan had instructed the Allies to cease parachuting arms ti Italian partisans "because he found out the Communists were getting most of them.". After Holohan's death, Migliari continued, Icardi radioed his head quarters "to parachute arms al most every day." At times when the arms were expected, Milgliari testified, Icardi, entertained non Communist partisans while the Communists collected the supplies. The witness also testified that Icardi, charged by the government with planning Holohan's murder, "was very frindly with Vincenzo Moscatelli" a top partisan lead er during the war and now a Com munist deputy. Holohan, who headed the office of Strategic Services mission be hind enemy lines,- was shot to death Dec. 6, 1944. The govern ment confirmed the murder by finding his body in Lake Orta in 1950. Lo Dolce is accused of fir ing the fatal shot after an attempt to poison the major failed. Figure heads and other carvings on ships of the 17th and 18th Cen turies were sometimes so heavy as to damage their sailing qualities. '. ?3lfAYSlKllLY To Every Car Owner n w ' Who Drives ,ln . . f , Ym ( $h. We'.. Give This ( h SA BOTTLE l " -?W27' , O PK SQUEEZE firestonc Windshield Cleaner BATTERY Knew the Exact Condition of Your Battery -Takes Just a Minute with Our Battery Analyzer hi Yr CwparhMnt. mf. CvM OtMW amd DM toeJHty, Slacks Union Service Station Sutherlin, Oregon Phone Oakland 2696 Ferber's Texaco Station Henry Huff, Convicted Communist, Out On Bail one of five Communists convicted in Federal Court here of conspir ing to teach and advocate violent overthrow of the government, was released, from the King County jail Monday after $20,000 bond was posted tor mm. Huff, 59, Washington State Com munist chairman, was the second of the five defendant released. Paul M. Bowen, Negro Commun ist organizer, was freed on $20,000 Da II atter ne ana tne otner defend ants were sentenced last Friday. Terry Pettus, John S. Daschbach and Mrs. Barbara Hartle remained in jail. Federal Judge William J. Llnd- berg, who presided at the 25-week trial, set Dan tor eacn of the five at $20,000 after passing sentence. Defense attorneys are preparing to appeal the convictions to the VS. Circuit Court. Club Swinging Police Beat Back Italians - ROME 11 Club-swineine no tice beat back protesting Italian students in front of the Russian em bassy Tuesday as demonstrations over the disputed Free Territory of Trieste broke out in various parts of Rome. The students answered the nalice club attacks with sticks. Manv of the demonstrators were bruised but no serious injuries were reported. Hundreds paraded elsewhere. carrying Italian flags, angrily shouting against Yugoslav Presi dent Tito's stand on Trieste and demanding the strategic Adriatic peninsula be returned to Italy. Some of the demonstrators marched past the Yugoslav lega tion near the heart of the city but no violence was reported as mobile riot police, armed witn submachine guns guarded the building. Trieste Division Only Solution, Says Sec. Eden LONDON () Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden said Tuesday the division of the troubled Trieste Free Territory along the present lonal border "seems to be tie only practicable" method of easing Italian-Yugoslav tensions. Eden told the House of Commons that Britain strongly deprecates the movement of troops by either Italy' or Yugoslavia. "This can only increase tension and incite public opinion," he said. "If all concerned will recall the overriding need for unity between nations who should be good neigh bors, I believe that we may yet find means of bringing both parties to agree to a settlement." Both Eden and Prime Minister Churchill expressed hope the Soviet Union will accent an invitation to a Jiroposed meeting of four-power oreign ministers Nov. 9 in Lugano, Switzerland. Eden said such a meeting could "make progress toward a settle ment of the German and Austrian questions, and so contribute to a significant reduction in world ten Ex-Oregon Legislator Moves To California PORTLAND (1 Phil Dreyer former state representative and one of Oregon's leading Democrats, mnflllllPMl Mnnrinv fitt ta Mfwlna to Los Angeles to work with a company ton , Duiras low-cost housing. V He resigned as secretary of the MllHnnmah Pnnntv nnmnnrntin Central Committe and president of tne Willamette Democratic Society. Dreyer served in the 1949 Legis lature and was associate director of research far the rtomnmt!r National Committee during the 1948 ana 1950 campaigns. v Portland Man Is Killed When Car Leaves Road unisuun city (A A ear failed to make a curve on the highway at Gladstone early Tues day and Clifford C. Long, 54, 'of roruana was Kiiiea, The report to the sheriff's office said Long, driving a borrowed car, was believed to have been heading toward Koseburg on a bunting trip. The car rolled and Long was dead on arrival at a hospital here. RENTAL MOVIES FULL FEATURE LENGTH GUNFIRE SWING, SISTER, SWING LOST CONTINENT STATE POLICE PHOTO LAB 105 EAST CASS DIAL 3-7091 Rental. .. $5.00 Per Night - , Wed. Oct. 21, 1953 The News-Review, koseburg. Ore. 7 Four Nominated For Master Post PORTLAND UH Grange head quarters reported Monday that four men bave been nominated for Ore gon Grange master, but one al ready has declined to run. The four are Elmer McClure, Milwaukic, the incumbent; Ralph Rogers, Eugene; George Murphy, Portland; and William G. Howes, Medford. The men, 1 nominated by three or more subordinate Granges, have until Nov. 10 to accept or reject the nominations. Murphy, manag er of the Grange Insurance com pany, said he would not accept Howes also was nominated for overseer, a post he now holds. Other nominees for- overseer are Robert Schmidt, Albany; Vera Lantz, Estacada; and Bert Rob erts, Smith River. ' Beulah Moore, Oregon City, and Garnett Ruckman, Imbler, were nominated for lecturer. Mrs. Moore, the Incumbent, said she would not seek re-election. - WINDOW SHADES Pastel Colors , ! AT rARCTPKIC ! New TEXTURED I t ? 4 T . T X t .? White . Natural Dove Grey Brawn Pink Yellov Olive Green Leghorn - Brick Red Oatmeal I FURNITURE COMPANY J 117 W. 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