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The News-Review from Roseburg, Oregon • Page 1

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The News-Reviewi
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Roseburg, Oregon
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library Co-vp Civil Void gbts Democrat ssye Army Expected To Attempt Moon Shot This Weekend Party's Fate May Hinge On Issue In '60 Ouster Of Louisiana Party Member Debated At Democrat Conclave WASHINGTON (AP) Oooos. Established 1873 14 Paget ROSEBURG, OREGON FRIDAY. DECEMBER 5, 1958 287-58 PRICE 5c Mass Funeral Held For 27 1 Icmtikueson itni io sum -rj! fyi MlfEt I mi I jy 0 tanner? UMM 1 1 jus- Two-Hour Parking Zones Established On 10 Street Areas Parking meter areas on 10 downtown Roseburg thoroughfares are being converted to two-hour zones, it was announced Thursday by George W. Farrell, city manager. The new plan, he said, is aimed at facilitating shoppers and cutting down on "meter feeding" along Jackson St.

by store and other employes working in tha business area. The new two-hour parking zones will be designated by blue colored meter posts, and should be ready for operation within a week to 10 days, the city manager stated. About 40 per cent of Roscburg's 768 parking meters soon will wear the distinctive blue paint. They are being set up on most downtown business streets except Jackson. Farrell said some 30C meter posts will be painted the blue color.

They will be found on Rose. Sheridan, Pine. Main and Kane streets, and also on ane ra Oak, Washington and Douglas av-l enues. One-hour narking will continue on Jackson St. Farrell said he did not expect the new system of metering would hrinff in anv more revenue than flOUd OBTAINS A0DI1IUNAL SPEED fflOM EARTH'S ClTiOt 7 0 ARMY'S ATTEMPT AT MOON If no hitch develops, the Army's first moon rocket, The Juno II, will blost off sometime this weekend from Cope Canaveral, Fla.

It is not expected to actually strike the moon. These diagrams show various possible outcomes, ony one of which would be considered successful. It is hoped that the Army's rocket will supply valuable information regarding the layer of deadly radiation that surrounds the earth. at the present time, but will Threat Of Red Interference On Route To Berlin Mounts Man Kills Self After Holding Six Captives PRINEV1LLE, Ore. (AP) An cx-convict brushed aside pleas to surrender and killed himself today after a 10-hour siege that began wnen briefly held six persons captive.

Stanley Robinson, 27, shot himself in the head as police crunched across the frozen lawn minutes after midnight to pump tear gas into his small, white frame house. uniy moments betore, a psychologist who had gone into tha house unarmed in an attempt to persuade Robinson to surrender walked out and said: "well, boys, 1 think it's all over." It was the only shot fired la tha siege that began when stats) policeman Vern Boyer went to tha house lo serve a warrant on Rob inson, released from tha state prison Oct. 31 Robinson, a Marin Corps vtr- 01 'he Korean War. then stepped from the bedroom with a 30-30 caliber rifle. "I thought 1 was a goner," Boyer said.

"That hfle looked awfully It was loaded and cocked. Boyer was kept prisoner 30 min utes, along with Robinson's for mer wile and their four children, whose ages range from years to 11 months. But then Stat Police Set. Low ell Hertzel persuaded Robinson to let his captives go unharmed. Police evacuated every nearby nou.se, and began a long vigil.

several times Kobinsoa dashed onto the porch. Once he shouted: "I won't come out until I give up the gun, or else use it." Another tima he accepted cigarettes from Hertzel, who said: "He told me that ha made up his mind that he wasn't going back to prison any more." Police talked to Robinsoa over tha phone. One he sobbed: "I'm Koin to end il TheB "id would wait Wd Scolt- PychoIogist and counselor at t0 UUc Robinson's widow Dorothv. who aivorcea mm wnii lie waa in prison, said after the shooting. "I did everything I thought was right." At the prison, Asst.

Warden Lou Barnes said Robinson had been an "excellent prisoner. Ha was the most decorated man ever to in the prison here." Robinson had been In the prison a year on a bad check conviction. The warrant police tried to lerve Thursday also concerned bad checks. Admission To Movie To Be Food For Needy A feature length family movie will be shown and sponsored Saturday by Winston-Dillard Chamber of Commerce, Rural Fir Depart ment ana Mwanis uun. Admission to tb movie will be food which will bo given to needy families in the Winston-Dillard area at Christmas Urn.

The movie will start at 12:30 p.m. at th Benetta Theatre in Winston. Ben Seheel, Kiwams Club president, aald. TV- 1 I uitax 400 WOO. tling in and out of isolated West Berlin.

One of East Germany's top Communists. Politburo member Hermann Matern, told a West Berlin election rally Thursday night that the airlines Pan American, I Air France and British European Airways have no legal right to' lly over hast German territory. "This situation must be brought in order," ha declared. He did not say what action the Communists have in mind. West German Chancellor Kon-rad Adenauer, who addressed an election rally in another part of West Berlin, said the Western powers would hold the Russians responsible for keeping open all routes to Berlin, including the air corridors.

He said he had a personal letter from U. S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles reaffirming that position. Mentions Agreement The letter, he added, specifically mentioned the 1949 Paris agreement in which the Russians ended their 15)48-49 blockade and guaranteed free access to this Allied foot-! hold 110 miles behind the Iron Cur-' tain. "Our allies stand upon it and we stand upon it," Adenauer said of this agreement.

Matern told the rally of 3.500 Communists, meeting behind a police line in the heart of West Berlin, that "capitalistic airlines make giant profits'' on their business with Berlin and "1 know of no agreement which legally supports these firms." This was the first specific attack on the Western airlines. Reckless Driving Charge Jails Myrtle Creek Man Circumstantial evidence pri-! manly a badly crumpled steel bridge caused a Myrtle Creek man to be found guilty of reckless driving Thursday. A Canyon ville Justice court iurv found Roger C. Binuham, 28. guilty and he was fined l')0 and sentenced to two days in the county jau oy junue rina fietzold.

He was cited by Deputy Sheriff accident on County Rd. 34 nearly l't miles from Days Creek. The officer testified that Pingham's car had failed to negotiate a turn onto the bridge, hit the north rail-' ing. overturned and came to rest on its top in Ihe creek. Bingham was uninjured but parts of the can were found on the hndee 59 feet i from the point of impact and the front end was torn off and landed 10 feet from the rest, Dickinson reported.

The jury was told that all supports on one side of the bndue were bent out of shape. These were described as ten heavy "1'' beams (spaced feet apart. Citation Follows Bump Of Pickup Motorbike otr sti. nst i.t Rocket Short On Brains But Lona On Brawn By JOHN BARBOUR Associated Press Scienc Writer NEW YORK (AP) A huge U.S. mooo rocket short on brains but long on brawn may blast into space this weekend on a trip that could take just 34 hours, but might la.st millions of years.

It is the U.S. Army's first shot at the moon and like its Explorer satellite shots, the Army hasn't spared the horses. This is perhaps the greatest different: between the planned Army prolie and the last three shots by the U.S. Air Force, one of which reached as high as 79.000 miles. The Air Force satellite weiehed about 86 pounds.

It was aimed at an orbit or at least a single trip around the moon. In its final stage it carried the electronic brains and maneuvering rocket to do the job. The elaborate guidance system and reversing rocket in the Air Force shot added greatly to the final stage weight but the Army rocket gets along with a minimum of guidance brains and no reversing rocket. It undoubtedly carries some instruments for measuring the phenomena of space, but the Army has not announced any details. Shot Lest Ambitious The 30 pound Army shot is less ambitious.

It too is aimed at the moon with the intention of hitting the lunar surface. But if all works well it may be destined for a greater glory. The Army has packed its rocket, dubbed Juno 11, with enough power and speed to overcome the pull of the earth's gravity shot, says it has a 1 in 2 chance of building up escape velocity and so blasting away from the earth into possible orbit around the sun. Such an orbit miht last millions of years. This assumes fir.

that all the moon rocket's engines will fire and that it will overshoot the moon. The moon it not an easy target to uii So many things art unknown about its mass and behavior that it can easily be missed. Just as unpredictable is the behavior of the moon rocket itself. The Air Force rocket that burned almost 80.000 miies above tha earth man'f greatest penetration of spac might have gone lo the moon. But with each stage of its flight, it fell a little mora away from Ha programed path.

Weara Self Out Finally It was at auch an angle that its anergy was not most efficiently used and it wore itself out before it had gon more than a third of the way. The Army rocket has the power to slice through a big hunk of space more power than it needs to hit the moon. It is generally conceded that the Army rocket system has more horsepower than the Air Force toucned off. You can get some idea by look-ing at the traveling times. The Air Force shot was to tase 72 hours before it was within moon range.

The Army shot will probably take about 34 hours. The Army hat kept mum on its rocket plans, because it said it doesn't want to occasion a buildup of public expectancy and the consequent pressure on its rocket people. But two days ago the service tower was pulled bark from the big moon rocket at Cape Canaveral. and it st.iod with its nose only shrouded. In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Interesting note in the news: 1 he armed forces told a house subcommittee in Washington on Tuesdav that the government owns nearly one and a half BILLION dollars worth of industrial plants that are producing nothing.

Reports submitted to a house armed services subcommittee by the army, navy and air force showed that the unused plants onmnally cost Ihe federal government $1,409,392,221 but would cost much more than that to replace now The reports said the government is spending about 31 million dollars a year to maintain the plants. How did it come about 1 Weil, one must presume that It came aimut because our federal government has become so UNIMAGINABLY big that mere trifles (Continued On Paze 4 Col. 4) The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Partly cloudy today, tonioht and Saturday with patches momma fog. Continued cool. Hiohest twnp.last 14 hours 4S Lowest torn p.

last 14 hours 41 Hiohtit Hmp. any Doc. a Lowest torn p. any Doc. (l'SS) Procip.

last 24 hours Proeip. from Dee. I 17 Procip. from Soot. 1 t.fl Deficiency from Soot.

1 2.17 Sunsot tonight, 4:3 p.m. Sunrtoe tomorrow, 7:31 a.m. Children Senate Committee Chairman Requests Moore Sales Delay A request General Services Administration to delay disposal of the Lillie. Moore property has been made by S. Sen.

John McClel-lan. Senate Government Operations Committee chairman, it was learned her today. McClcllan took Uie action at the request of Oregon's junior senator, Richard Nsuberger. Both have asked GSA to refrain from selling the Roseburg historical aite "until the eommitte which, approved a previous House bill transferring property to Roseburg has an opportunity to consider additional legislation at the forthcoming session of Congress." Tha government agency has set a sale data for tha property, located at Washington Av. and nos for Dec.

10 at Seattle. Neuberger's office said thia morn ing the intercession of McClellan "haa improved prospects of eventually saving the property." Wednesday, Mayor Arlo Jacklin sent personal telegrams to Presi dent Eisenhower, Neuberger and governor-elect Mark Hatfield asking their assistance in halting the sale at this time. Considerable support has been evidenced here for the proposal of the Douglas County Historical Society to preserve the pioneer woman's former property for historical purposes. She willed the lot to the government before her death. Stewart Park, Fair To Feature AF Jet Airplane Displays If plans go as expected, the Roseburg area soon will be well on its way toward establishing its own "air force." Millard Magness.

commander of Umpqua Post 16 of the American iegion, noseDurg, announcea to day that youngsters soon will bo "flying" a real F8SA Sabre Jet fighter in Stewart Park. He said we post, in cooperation wun tne City of Roseburg, already has ob- tained Air Force clearance to ob tain the jet craft. Delivery, he said, probably will be in "the near future." Meanwhile, Douglaa County Fair Manager Dick Turley said another F86A probably will be displayed at the 1959 Fair. He said arrangements for transportation of flane from its present location at resno, are being worked out. The other plane, the Air Force informed Magness, is at Reno.

The Air Fore told the Legion officer that the post will be notified when the craft ia made available for delivery. The Roseburg city council last summer voiced its aim to obtain an aircraft for placement in the park. The Legion post followed thia up with an endorsement and Air tore approval followed shortly thereafter. Manges ssid th plan probably will bo transported to Roseburg by means of a truck. en dropped in curtsies as they introduced.

Everywhere there wer ogles and murmurs and flash bulbs popping. Th princess did manage to get In two brief dancing interludes a walls with Prince Serge Obolensky to tha melody of th song written for her, "The Princess Waltr," and a foxtrot with Rainier to the tunes of "The Lady Is a Tramp" and "That's Show Business." For tha knowing feminine guests Princess Grace made her first public appearanc on thia month-long visit to New York dressed in fichu of pink malin net studded with sequins, secured with a nosegay of violets and sweetheart rosea. Her gown, of Empir line with wid belt and bouffant pink satin, waa enhanced with a diax-xling display of diamond tiara, necklace, bracelet and earrings. A silver blue mink stole completed th ensemble. Simp I Statement As photographers busily worked.

Princess Grac made her only press statement of th evening. Someon asked who had designed her costume, and sh replied: "Msggi Rouff." Th SlOO-a-plat affair was th fourth annual Imps rial Ball, sponsored by a motor company with th proceed going to the Hospitalised Veterans Service of th Musician Emergency Fund. There wer mora than 1.000 guests. Performers in th tableaux included Eddie Albert, Vers Zorine, Hermione oiic.ld, Patrice Mun- i ing Louisiana delegations told th Democratic National Committee today its decision on ouster of a member involved In a civil rights controversy mav influence th party's fate In the 1960 elections. t-amuie r.

Gravel wbos removal is being sought by th Louisiana State Committee. that the move against him is sparked by individuals who favor a States Rights partv. Gravel in a brief filed with the national committee'a credentials unit that if the authority of the national group is challenged "it, could cause inestimable damage to the party's prestig nationally." tne slate group voted at Baton Rouge Oct. a to replace Gravel as its national committeeman with Jett M. Talbot because Gravel was considered out of step with most unnsiana Democrats on civil rights.

Soek Butler's Outtor The civil rights fight among Democrats brought from one Southerner a call for removal of Paul M. Butler from th national chairmanship on the ground that he is a troublemaker. Butler's friends on the National Committee expressed confidence that Butler, who favors a strong civil rights plank in the party's 1960 platform, would ride out any ouster or censure move in a full committee session Saturday. But ler himself told a reporter he had not heard of any formal move against hiin. Today hearing, before a National i 1 1 credentials group, was to receive rival claims of Gravel Jr.

and Talbot to Loui-sana's National Committee post. Gravel is the incumbent. Civil rights and party rules are involved in the dispute. Committeeman Gravel was remove! by the Louisiana State Committee because segregationist leaders in the part said he was out of step with Louisiana'a stand on civil rights. Gravel has said segregation ia morally wrong but that as a practical proposition integration la not for Louisiana.

Christmas Parade Delayed A Week; Stores Stay Open The Christmas parade being promoted by the Roseburg Junior Chamber of Commerce, with the i. i visjo of thamber of Com. merce has been postponed until next Friday, but stores will be open until 9 p.m. again for Christmas shoppers. Bill Cramer, chairman of the parade in which Santa will be the star, said the event had originally befit scheduled for tonight, but it had to be postponed until next Friday, Dec.

12, to allow more time for entries to prepat. It will start at 7 p.m. next Friday. Anyone wishing to enter a float may do so, he said. Downtown stores will be open tonight until 9.

and next Friday to the same hour. The following week, late shoppers will have three nights until that hour, Dee. 18. 19 and 20. The last day for lata closures of the stores ia Dee, 23.

Lions Will Man Salvation Army Fund Buckets Roseburg Lion Club members will bo manning Salvation Army bucketa on Roseburg business streets Saturday, Dee. 13, and th members have issued a challenge to any other local servic club lo match their efforts. The Lions have participated in the Salvation Army effort to raise money for Christmaa contributions the past coupl years. Other service clubs have also taken part at various times. The Lions will dispens ith next Thursday night's meeting because of th banquet th club ia sponsoring for th Roseburg High School football team and its cosches next Wednesay night.

Ted Ogdahl. Willamette University Coach, will be th speaker. The members wer spurred by Central Douglas United fund Chairman Tom Pargeter to hasten conclusion of th club's effort in th fund raising campaign. A report by Edell Bryant revealed the recent light bulb sale a success, but some bulbs remain and some areas wer not covered. A date to solicit these areas will be set later.

FLU! CALL ANSWCRED The Roseburg Rural Fire Department answered a call reporting a flu fire at the residence of Donald Harvey, 280 NE Ward Ave. Thursday at 8:11 p.m. No damage was reported. Levity Fact Rant By F. Reixtmtein Ptace-lovinf Khrushchev should' sending double-talk missives end tubttirut lyhr of mistl- Group Rites Are Attended By Thousands By JAN HARTNETT CHICAGO AP) A mass funeral for 27 children who lived so briefly and died so quickly in the city's worst school fire brought out thousands of mournera today.

One by one, the caskets were wheeled into the Northwest Armory by military policemen of a special 5th Army detail. They were placed in a double row in front of an altar erected on the stage. The group rite for 27 of the 87 youngsters who perished in the fire at Our Lady of the Angels school Monday was ai rare as it was impressive. No similar funeral has taken place in thia city in recent decades, at least. Archbishop Albert Gregory Mey-1 er.

spiritual shepherd of Chicago area Roman Catholics, sang a requiem high Mass. Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York was at a red-draped throne to tha left of the altar. Some Caskats Whit Some caskets in the double row before the altar were white. Some were bronzed, some small, some of standard size. Families of the young victims followed the caskets up the center aisle of the armory.

Some mothers, tears shimmering in their eyes, were supported hv relatives as thev walked to a front section reserved for the close kin of the dead. The big hall which normally echoes to the tramp of marching feet and drill commands, or the bounce of basketballs and cheers of sports fans, resounded today to the dirges of the Holy Name Ca-thdral choir and mournful tones of a carillon. "Jie Maa in the (Uno-seat ar mory was not opened to the public. Families of the 28 children were eiven 150 tirkt each to dis tribute among parents, relativea and close friends. Separate Service Students from all Catholic parochial schools will attend acrvicei (Continued on Page Col.

() Umpqua Hotel Now Undergoing Remodeling A $100,000 improvement program which will entail complete remodeling of some 100 rooms and other improvements began thia week at the Umpqua Hotel in Roseburg. Emit Ramberg, proprietor, said some adjoining rooms will be converted into two-room suites. This will reduce by some 20 units tha current number of 120 units in the hotel, he noted. Improvements ill tb rooms will include replacement of furniture, installation of tile showers and baths and addition of television sets so that all rooms will equipped with receivers. Coen Supply Co Roseburg, la furnishing all bathroom fixtures, said Ramberg.

The hotel owner said the program in line with previously announced plans aimed at complete renovation of the hotel, will be carried on over a period of from six months to a Tha lobby will be remodeled after work is completed in the rooms, he said. Also included in the project is replacement of tha present entrance structure on SE Jackson added Ramberg. Remodeling of th. Initial block of rooms should be finished about a month, said Ramberg. Of Dean Emeritus Ralph Leighron Passes EUGENE, AP) Funeral arrangements were being completed here Friday for Ralph Waldo l.eishton.

70. the dean emeritus of the University of Oregon School' of Physical Education. 1 His wile. Lucia, touna mm aeaa i in bed, the victim of a heart at tack l-eighton started at tha university in 1928 as a teaching fellow. He waa dean of th physicsl education school from until he retired in 19S.1.

After thst ho was on an advisory board lor tha S. Park Service and did some writing for periodicals. The widow and a son. Jack, a physical education teacher at Eastern Washington College of Education, are among survivors. DRUNK MITID PIN! Charli Mall.

SI, Medford. changed his pica on a drunk charg Thursday from innocent to so i It and waa Jailed in lieu of a $10 fin imposed hy Diot. Judge narrrn r. noonruu. was rested Dec 1 hy staie polic on a chsrgo of beat) CD a i a convenience lo shoppers who come to Roseburg to visit tha stores.

"It won't be necessary to worry so much about the meters while people are shopping if they put their cars in a two-hour tone," the city manager said. The proposal was discussed at length with Police Chief Vernon M. Murdoch Farrell said, before the plan was initiated. Air Force Flight Due Over Roseburg Rose burn area paople who look i i -i l- i witness wbuta to th. A ir Force A flight c.ngnn.

transport planes is slated toTasa over Roseburg at lhat tima in ob servance of the Air Force loth birthday. Exact time of the flight' passage over Roseburg is 1:58 p.m. The flight ia one of two groups of the planes all operated by the Air Reserve squadron in Portland which will fly over Oregon cities Sunday in marking the anniversary. Ihe Southern Oregon flight is scheduled to leave Portland about 1 p.m., head south down the Willamette Valley, turn at Medford and fly over coastal cities en route back to Portland. The other flight will pass over cities in Northern Oregon and Southern Washington while flying an east-west pattern between the coast to The Dalles.

Maj. Darrell Davis, commanding officer of Flight 9416th Air Reserve Squadron, Roseburg, said tha planes will fly at about 2.000 feet. They will fly over Cottage Grov at 1:41 m. and, after passing over Roseburg, proceed to Med ford, where they will make their turn at 2:20 p.m., ho aaid. Snow Flurries Make Driving Hazardous By THI ASSOCIATED PRESS Snow flumes A the Portland, Bend, Corvallis, Cottag Grove and Ontario areas may mak driving hazardous this evening, but forecasters said that it will melt between showers, except at the higher levels.

Cold air moving in from the Alaskan coast ia picking up just enough moisture to cans clourti .1. Weather Bureau aaid th showers will increase and temperatures will drop later today. The Oregon Highway Commission warned that mountain roads are icy. Freesing temperatures were reported in all mountain areas. Low mountain area temperatures this morning were 10 at Senca, 12 at Austin and Lapuie, and 14 at Sisters.

Baker regis- tered-14, and it was 15 at Burns, Saturday, snow suowers are ei- pected in th coast Hang, in Hood River Valley and tha Baker- La Grand area. Plan Wreckage Gives Up, Bodies Of Two Fliers K1NZUA, Ore. (AP) Tb bodies of two Seattle area men war recovered Thursday afternoon from their wracked plan on a mountain ridge aome 10 miles southeast of this central Oregon community. Th dead were William Kelsey. 25.

Seattle, who had been visiting his parents in Spray. Ore and I Richard Jacobs, 32, Kent, Wash Both wore members of th Seattle fire department They were byinf from nearby Spray. Oregon, to Seattle when the crssh happened. James 01 in ureson noara or Aeronautics ssid they had left wprav rs abouf ettt tat rss I BERLIN" (AP) The threat of Communist interference mounted today against busy American. British and French airlinen shut-! Buckeroo Jamboree For Square Dancers To Draw 500 Here Some 500 square dancers from Western Oregon, are expected to converge on Roseburg this weekend to take part in the 6th annual Koseburg Buckeroo Square Dance Club jamboree.

Theme of this year's affair ia to be "outer space" and cootumes, decorations and entertainment wUl be keyed to fit the theme. Tha jamboree will be in the Buckeroo Barn at Winchester Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight and Sunday from 1 to p.m. Harold Curry, club president, said there will be 26 square dance callers from the northwest and from northern California. Music will be supplied by Eddie K.

and his band from Vancouver, Wash. Master of ceremonies will be Harold (Curley) Reynolds of the Buck-eroos. The hall will be decorated with replicas of jet aircraft, sputniks and planets in orbit. Sunday afternoon, "space people" from the Portland Area Council and State Federation of Square Dancers will entertain with a "space dance." Similar entertainment to "moon music will be presented Saturday night by the host club. Curry said a number of clubs in! thie area plan to attend the jamboree with their total memberships in place of their regular weekly dances.

Winston Man Confesses Early Thursday Burglary The wheels of justice spun rapidly Thursday for John Grady Pippen The 21 year-old Winston resident was nabbed by police about 11 o'clock for a ourglary he admitted committing about 3.30 a.m. Brought into district court in the afternoon. Pippen waived his right to a preliminary hearing and was bound over to the grand jury. Taken back to jail. Pippen decided he would do a hit more waiving so he was brought into circuit court.

There, he told Judge Charles S. Woodnch he didn't the grand jury to loox into his case and that he wanted to enter a plea of guilty. The judge post-I pnned imposing sentence until Pip-; pen's FBI record is received, i Pippen admitted breaking into the K. T. Cone Logging Co.

where he formerly worked and of taking a check protector and 110 company I checks. He said he had taken them i to his plar and had fallen asleep i only to he awakened by tha state 1 police officer. I Bid Weather Postpones Search For Big Airliner MADRID IAP) Rad weather throughout central Spain today postponed an air search for a Spanish airliner missing with 21 persons aboard. The four engine commercial plane left Vigo, northwest Spain, at 4:43 m. Thursdav and was due in Madrid at o.TO.

lis lat report, at 5:30. said It was over Salamanca. 100 miles northwest of Madrid, and was having trouble with its cotnmunicati4B equjp-' mtnL' I Princess Grace Gives High Society Surprise Sample Of Royal Displeasure WILLIAM C-LOVIlt NEW YORK (AP) Princess Grace of Monaco gav high society a surprise sample of royal displeasure Thursday night with abrupt flight from th danc floor. Caught to a milling crush of spectators, guards and photographers at a ball in her honor, th former movie atar mad her sudden exit with lips set, chin high and trailing slightly bewildered escort, her husband Prinr Rainier III of Monaco. A spokesman at th royal box explained momenta later that the princess had found th throng hist too much when someon stepped upon her whit satin slipper.

The royal wrath subsided swiftly, however, and th girl from Philadelphia remained for the midnight "Beauty and th Beasts" tableaux, and presided at th drawing of grand pnres for lucky ticket holders. But although she smiled, ah dsnced no more. Highlights Ivemn) Th incident highlighted a nightlong barrage of adulation which started when th royal coupl arrived for th chic fiesta in th grand ballroom of th Hotel Astor. A corps of six mounted police and a dozen patrolmen vainly tried to hold back a crowd of about a thousand spectators who jammed outside th hotel A Wednesday night collision of a pickup truck and a motorbike re-i suited in the pickup driver being cited for failing to yield to on coming traffic. Cited by Roseburg police was Eugene Harris Keitiman, 29.

1228 Brown St. The arresting officer reported Keitman had pulled across W. Harvard Ave to enter W. Harrison St. when his vehicle aa struck by Ihe tmo-wheeler driven by Walter Ray Russell 728 W.

Union St. No injuries listed, but Ihe pickup received damaged front fender and the motorbike front end was damaged. lm for a eloseup peep at th unnrrena Kin There mora of th same swoM ft trn oust ironk an sgqwwhj i.

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Pages Available:
158,517
Years Available:
1909-1964