The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 25, 1956, Page 1, Image 1

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    Voting Already Underway as Absentee Ballots Cast
POUNDID 1651
! )
H
106th Year
2 SECTIONS-20 PAGES
Tho Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, October 23, 1956
PRICI S
No. 212
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Although election day Isn't until Nov. I, voting 'Is going on
dally at the courthouse. Those voting early are persons
like Harold E. Young (left) and M. A. Titus (center) who
Dip
MMffl
Attention is being called in this
election year to the fact that pros
perity is spotted, that not every
gjvuy la vii a uigu jcvci ui civ
nomic wellbeing. This is true, and
the condition is not unusual. In a
free society there is a flow marked
by strong current, hy flow move
ments and even by backward ed
dies. Only in a strictly regimented
economy can every group be kept
at an equality and that historical
ly is at a level of mediocrity or
worse.
The best proof of the distribu
tion of wealth is not found In re
portion income but in the physical
evidence of sharing the goods and
services available. Tte output of
our mines and mills and factories
lr-not being absorbed by a few
rich persons. Instead it Is going in
to general almost univsrsalcon
sumption. - The current Issue of VS. News
-and World Report gives some evi
dence of how wide the distribution
is of goods and services among
the American people, as follows:
Hemes: three out of five fami
lies own or are buying their homes.
Electricity: nearly 99 per cent of
all homes are wired.
Aatos: three out of four families
have at least one auto and
(CtntlaoH m editorial page. .)
Santiam Pass
Slippery With
New Snowfall
State police reported light snow
falling late Wednesday evening in
Santiam Pass with six Inches al
ready on the ground. They said
highways were covered with snow
to the Detroit Dam area and
warned motorists to carry chains.
The Highway Department said
four inches of snow was reported
in Willamette Pass, five inches at
Government Camp with seven
inches of roadside snow, two
inches at Warm Springs Junction
and two inches at Meacham. De
partment officials said all roads
where snow has fallen have been
sanded and plows have been in
operation.
Here in Salem, McNary Field
weathermen predicted wme rain
this morning, showers this after
noon and tonight. The high today is
expected to resell 50 the h
near 38.
Temperatures are expected to
dip as low as 10 degrees in the
high valleys of Eastern Oregon,
may not be quite as cold in suc
ceeding days.
Plane Heads Back
From Sea Crossing
SHANNON. Ireland, Oct. 25
. An " airliner carrying 104 U.S.
servicemen and their families
returned safely to Shannon today
after failure of one engine forced
h 10 turn oacii.
It was bound for Gander, Nfld.,
on a flight to the United States.
Family Car
By Wslly Fa Ik
I
. 4
The way yea werry ever the,
car payment jtm'i think they
owed US the moBey." -
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Voters Send
Ballots From
Many Nations
Election day is still amost two
weeks away, but several wore of
Marion County voters have al
ready cast their ballots.
County Clerk Henry Mattson
said Friday, 10 days before the
Nov. 6 election, is the deadline
for application for an absentee
ballot whereby voters who win be
away that day may still exercise
their voting rights.
The clerk s office has been mail-!
ing and receiving absentee ballots 1
froiii ail ovrf the world, pariicu-
1 larly from men and women in the
armed forces. Several who are
going to be out of the county a
week from Tuesday have marked
ballots' at booths set up in the
basement of the Courthouse.
These absentee ballots, which
mut be received by the clerk's
office at least five days before
election day, will go into the ballot
boxes of the appropriate pre
cincts to be counted along with
the rest
Ike Planning
Quick Trips
To Southland
WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 Of -President
Eisenhower will make
three separate campaign trips
states including three in the South
which supported him in 1952.
Press secretary James Hagertyj0' eNen, .remaining empioyeu
announced the schedule today,! ?.nd "nu).e J0?..,
emphasizing that Eisenhower will
return to Washington at the end
of each day, primarily to keep tab
on developments in the Soviet
satellite ; states.
Eisenhower will fly to Florida
and Virginia on Monday; Texas
and Oklahoma on Wednesday;
and Pennsylvania on Thursday. He
will make six speeches, five of
them at airports. The only major
address will be at Philadelphia.
These activities will carry the
President's campaign through
Nov. 1 just five days shy of
the Nov. 8 election.
Car Strikes
Salem Man
A Salem man who was struck by
a car in the rain at dusk Wednes
day at Chemcketa and Winter
Streets was hospitalized with leg
; and shoulder fractures and a head
uccraacn, pence said.
Condition of the man, listed as
Ethan A. Collier. 69, of 559 N. 24th
St., was "satisfactory" early this
morning, according to attendants
at Salem Memorial Hospital, where
he was taken by Willamette ambu
lance. Collier was thrown about 40 feet
in the accident about 5:35 p.m..
police said.
Driver was listed , as Norbert
Joseph Fagan, 9.'I9 Shipping St.
3 GOP Campaigners Bring
f
r lying ciepnanr to iaiem
(Picture r Page I.)
Republicans brought their "fly
ing Elephant" into Salem Wednes
day night, carrying three cam
paigners for the GOP slate of can
didates and a "get-out-the-vote"
movement.
Aboard the four place plane
were Philip Hitchcock, ex-state
senator and loser to Douglas Mc
Kay for the party nomination for
U.S. Senate, Donald Walker, Port
land attorney . representing state
chairman Wendell Wyatt, and Ivan
Congleton, a Young Republican
leader.
Hitchcock criticised spending
policies of Sen. Wayne Morse, Mc
Kay's Nov. 6 opponent, and said
Morse "is making campaign
promises that are impossible to
fulfill."
Alms at Mart
Congleton aimed his words at
Morse's criticism of President
Eisenhower. "There has never
been a time when senators have
It greater moral obligation to eon-
will be out of town on election day. Mrs. J. A. Jelderks,
deputy county clerk, Is shown looking on. Deadline for ap
plications for early ballots is thli Friday. (Statesman Photo.)
Baldock Freeway Busiest
Rural Highway in Oregon
Baldock Freeway is the busiest rural highway in the state,
according to permanent traffic recorder data for September
released Wednesday by the State Highway Department.
But the 8,573 daily average vehicle count was only a little
more than 40 per cent of the 20,632 which crossed Marion and !
Center street bridzes in Salem
Firm Stages
Fast Recovery
From Fire
Sutrtman Ntwi Service
KF.1ZER, Oct. 24-The Home
Heating k Insulation Co. will be
back in production Thursday after
a $25ft00 fire which only last week
completely destroyed its plant at
840 Plymouth Dr.
The sudden turn of events was
announced today by co-owner Har
vey Muyskens, who reported:
1. Purchase of a closed-down
similar insulation product plant in
Independence, with Ks equipment
2. Rebuilding of a new Keizer
plant, scheduled to start next
week and be ready for operation
in about six weeks.
Iniulalioa Material
Muyskens and Roy Hamilton
operate the business which pro-
duces a "thermoseal" insulation
material made of wood pulp prod
uct which has been made fire
' b.v chemical process. The
-'" f'-" " '
Muyskens said the Independence
operation would be temporary and
would be discontinued as soon as
the new Keizer plant of 3,000
square iet is erected. Equipment
will be moved from Independence
and the building on a Southern
Pacific spur at Third Street will
then be put up for sale, he added.
The Independence plant, ' for
merly Independence Home Prod
ucts Co.. was sold by Richard
Hclin of Denver at an undisclosed
figure. Negotiations were handled
by Oregon Development Co. of
Salem. Helin is son of the late
Robert Helin who operated the
Independence plant,
Today's Statesman
Pag Sot.
Classified l-19?:..ll
Comics .... 16 II
Crossword 17..
Editorials 6..
Farm 13-
Homo Panorama
Markets ...17..
Obituaries 17..
Radio-TV 16 .
Sports 11,12 .
Star Gazer 7..
Valley News 9, 10
Wirtphoto Pag 16
...II
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fine partisan criticism of the presi
dent to language that would not
detract from world confidence in
the White House.
Walker credictrH that -i
of vnnr vote wilt inV T th. "iZm 7 ' nBme 01 nval Ior ' slaie voters again this November.
try back "nto he r.nd J Z SupTeme Court vacancy had "Wither or not we have an
Z 'Sersln th' lher PI here is entire up to the
nilatinn und hio tavo. " l,urry l-ountv clerlt 01llce- voters of Portland, Walter Holt,
Behind Schedule ! circuit Jae David R Vanden-
The flying politicians almost an 1 berg' who is Partic'Pat'ng a
hn ,r Sttr-JiT0!8"!"! contest against William
at Corvallis nd Alhom,
int. uj uiai mil wvumj uur ivjlu
ers including county chairman
John Carkin, vice chairman Mrs.
Edna Stacey, secretary Mrs.
George Deway, William L. Phil
lips, chairman of the McKay cam
paign committee; and Mrs. John
Cochran, president of the Federa
tion of Republican Women.
State Rep. Alfred Loucks is
scheduled to board the "Flying
Elephant" today when it heads
south toward Medford with stops
included at Lebanon and Sweet
Homt. -
daily in September. i
The overall totals of 33 rural'" s""ua k
counters in the state showed an
increase in traffic of 2 per cent
over September, 1955, State
Highway Engineer W. C. Wil
liams said.
Busy Labor Day
The count on Ralrlnck Freeway
was taken st North Chemawa
Road crossing. High day in Sep-1
tcmber was Labor Day, Sept. 3,1
when 14,825 vehicles passed the
recorder, 1,141 of them in one
hour between 5 and 6 p.m.
Highway 99E showed a de
crease with the opening of the
Freeway. A recorder one mile
south of Woodburn counted a
daily average of 5,434 last month,
compared with 11,734 in Septem
ber last year.
One at Hubbard on the Wilson-ville-Hubbard
connection between
Highway WE and the Freeway
showed a daily average of 948
last month, compared with 5,418
last year when Freeway traffic
from Portland had to shift at
that point to the old highway be
cause the south portion was still
under construction.
pMfc Volume
Marion-Center street bridges
reached their peak volume last
month on Saturday, Sept. 8,
j when 23,604 vehicles crossed
inem. mis was a
2.4 increase
over September, 1955. Hourly fig-
ures were not kept on the bridges.
Second busiest of the perma-'
nent recorders in rural areas was
on Highway 28 a mile east of;
nere 1 daiy vage
of 7,965 was counted.
Kefauver Sets
Record for
Handshaking
DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 24 1
Sen. Estes Kefauver, an old con
firmed handshaker, hit a new
campaign handshaking high at the
main gate of the Ford Motor Co.
Rouge plant in Dearborn today.
Breasting a human stream of
workers d u r i n g the 4 o'clock
change of work shifts, Kefauver
pumped hands right and left for
a full hour.
"Boy, this is hard work," he
confided to newsmen.
If the Deiviucratic vice-presidential
candidate missed any of
the 40,000 Ford workers estimated
to enter and depart from the huge
1.200-acre plant at shift change
time, it was only because he
could work only one gate at a
time. A plant guard said there
were at least 13 gates.
Art aide clocked him, and esti
mates of the number of hands he
gripped ran as high as 3,000. Ke
fauver himself guessed he shook
hands wilh 1.300 workers.
Sample Ballot
Stamp Protested
By Vandcnberg
KLAMATH FALLS, Oct. 24 OH
ftrtA ilitrra nmt aci nA tutau tkii
.m . A"""' " "
1 ??cAnilr. MeTord. and Peter
. I Welch, Portland, said he had been
j . u . . n- . . . . ,
I'lvnttwci a name flau well opUKallC MTV IlldlUng VfrDal UlUS
stamped on the sample ballots. I for the big livestock event. Ex
McAllister is filling the Supreme j hibitors were wagering today that
Court vacancy temporarily by ap- j Seattle gets it, if Portland loses
poinimcm.
"I am sure that Mr. McAllister
would not personally approve the
use of such irregular procedure...
I can hardly believe that any of
the county clerks of our state
would knowingly depart from this
principle. The incident which oc-
curred in Curry County is most
regrettable," Vandenberg said.
60 Die in Arab
Retaliations
For Arrests
RABAT, Morocco, Oct. 24
(AP)-Sixty dead were counted
in Morocco today, victims of
grim Arab retaliation for the
arrest by the French of five
leading Algerian reikis. Many
were mutilated.
Angry anti-French demonstra
tions and protest strikes spread
across seething North Africa as
Arab governments demanded re
lease of the Algerians. In Tripoli,
Libya, demonstrators stoned the
British Embassy and Europeans
cars.
Among the $0 dead, mostly Euro
peans, were seven French soldiers.
They were killed and 24 comrades
were wounded in two ambushes in
eastern Morocco last night. This
was the most serious French mill
tary loss reported on Moroccan
territory since Morocco cast off
French troops id Morocco were
placed on the alert. The French
Embassy demanded that the Mo
roccan government act to safe
guard the French population in
Mekncs. French and Moroccan
troops mounted guard there in the
t-uropean quarter, wnere 20,000
Europeans live. j
Protest strikes in Morocco and
Tunisia spread to Tripoli, where a
general strike was called. All per
sonnel at Whcelus Field, a U.S. Air
Force base in Libya, were re
stricted to their stations.
The five Algerian leaders were
flying from Rabato Tunis in a
French-operated plane, manned by
a French crew, when the pilot
set them down in Algiers where
they were arrested.
Lad Knocked
From Bike by
Hit-Run Car
Sutumnn Newi Service
HUBBARD, Oct. 24-Earl
Sweeten of Hubbard received
a 1
possible concussion and jaw frac
ture in a bicycle accident Wednes-
day morning on Highway 99E near
Wilsonville Junction, state police
said,
The 12-year-old boy was "feeling
fine" Wednesday night at Wood-
burn Hospital, where attendants
said he did not seem to have a
concussion but the injury to his
jaw had not been determined.
Sweeten told police he was rid
ing his bicycle to school in Wood
burn when he was struck by a hit
run car about S:35 a.m.; State Pa
trolman Robert M. Anderson said.
Seattle, Spokane Seeking to
Lure PI Show
By LIIXIE L. MADSEN
Farm Editor, The Statesman
NORTH PORTLAND, Oct. 24
There were more than Oregon
crowds at the 46th annual Pacific
International Livestock Exposition
today. Seattle and Spokane were
out in full force making a big
pitch to move the PI, lock, stock
and barrel, north.
All over the grounds beneath
the huge 11-acre roof, gloom was
settling down among the exhibitors
as they asked each other if this
would be the final Pacific Inter
national Livestock Show in North
Portland.
The situation fs this:
Some time ago the fire depart
ment said "no more big crowds
in the stadium stand. Too hazar
dous." Rebuilding to meet fire protec
tion requirements promised to be
too costly. A move was bailed tu
rebuild the plant on new ground.
Portland voters passed a bond is
sue to make that possible. Then
Portland got into a big hassle as
to where to build. Leaders dead
locked. Some of the deciding ques-
1: t
"ons are D,n relurneo 10 ,ne
PI manager said. "Until this is
( settled there's definitely a question
as to whether there will be an-
i other PI here."
i In the meantime. Seattle and
-
i it.
So far as livestock Is concerned
the show has grown each year,
This year it has drawn herds from
far places. Straus ! Medina Here-
! fords are here from San Antonio,
i Texas. Another Hereford herd,
that of Kenneth Kuhlmann. came
from North Ptatte, Neb. Ayrshires,
jHolsteins, - Guernseys came from
,
Soviet Forces to Remain in
Poland While NATO Active
WARSAW, Poland, Oct. 24
Wladyslaw Gomulka told
the Poles tonight Soviet
troops will stay in Poland so
long as there are Nortn At
lantic Treaty Organization
bases in West Germany.
The new party boss, who
led Polish Communists in
their political revolt for
"freedom and sovereignty"
last weekend, spoke before a
throng of about 250,000 in
Warsaw.
Justice Bureau to Prosecute
If Negroes Kept From Voting
By JACK ADAMS
WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 OrV-Asst.
Atty. Gen. Warren Olney III said
today there will be post -election
criminal prosecutions in the south
if qualified Negroes are denied the
vote in the Nov. 6 election.
He told newsmen that "disfran-
Salem Child
Found After
Reno Flight
Nine-year-old Karen Henvy, ob
ject of a Wide search In Nevada
after she ran from a courtroom in
Reno into a snowstorm Tuesday,
was back with her father Wednes
day. The girl, sought for more than
eight hours, Was found when she
emerged from a basement dress
ing room of a hotel where her fa
ther is maintenance engineer, ac
cording to Associated Press.
Dauchter of Mrs. Nathalie Wack-
'effjer, 2215 Chemeketa St., she is to
return to Salem, accordin to the
ruling of the court Tuesday. Ka
ren's flight from the courtroom
followed the reading of the ruling,
AP reported Tuesday,
"I want to stay with my daddy,"
she said when found. Her father,
Thomas Henvy of Reno, had asked
full custody. Karen has been living
nine months of the year with her
mother and three with her father.
Karen seemed to be happy in
Salem, according to friends who
expressed surprise at the, reports
from Reno. Mrs. Wacker and an
oilier son, Larry, 14, were in Reno
to attend the hearing.
From Portland
British Columbia, and Shorthorns
from Alberta.
Thursday has been set aside as
"Governor's Day" with Governor
Elmo Smith to be here for the
afternoon livestock showing, and
to attend the evening variety
show, which has been labeled "the
best" since the colorful horse
show days.
(Additional details page 1.)
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BUELL, Oct 24 Inspecting new Buell Park In north Polk
County today were judges' of National Grange Sears
Roebuck Foundation Community Service contest. The
development has won a $1,000 prize and is in the running
jEJUilJti2tstJs)imA.iit
Factory and farm workers,
office clerks and villagers
paraded afoot and8 In trucks
to the 'square In front of the
35-story Palace of culture and
Science, formerly known as
Stalin Palace, to hear Go
mulka. A great cheer went
up when he declared, "It
depends only upon us how
long Soviet troops may re
main here."
But his further statement
chisement of colored voters is go
ing forward .n a mass basis"'
through revision of registration1
roles in some areas of Alabama,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississip
pi and North Carolina. Some of the
procedure involved is "fraudu
lent" on the face of it, he said.
Olney named the White Citizens
Councils, opponents of school inte
gration, as prime movers in this
matter and said a half-dozen FBI
investigations are in progress.
Statutes 'Weak
"But," Olney said, the "weak
ness" of existing civil rights stat
utes makes it impossible for the
Justice Department to move until
the right to vote has been actually
denied on Election Day too late
to help the voter.
''You can't make a cast until
a qualified-voter t tt deprived of
his rights at the polls," he said.
"But in every instance -where we
can show a qualified person was
denied the right to vote simply be
cause of his color, we Intend to
prosecute." , -,-
Congress Coold Act
Olney, who heads the depart-
meat's Criminal Division,
said he had advised Chair
man Burleson (D Tex) of the Com
mittee on House Administration of
the results of tome of the South
ern investigations and called bis
attention to a section of the :4th
Amendment which provides (or re
duction of House membership, for
any state where persons are de
nied the voting privilege on any
grounds except rebellion or other
crime.
Olney said such reduction hi
proportion to the number of citl
zens denied the vote," is a matter
entirely within the control of Con
gress. Olney said he had also renewed
a previous request to the Senate
Elections subcommittee that
it hold hearings in the South be
fore Election Day on evidence of
"purging of Negroes from the
registration rolls.
JACKSON, Miss., Oct. 24 A
Gov. J. P. Coleman tonight de
nounced as "mass slander" and
"a cheap political bluff" a Justice
Department announcement o f
plans to prosecute instances of
The Weather
Today's forecast: Occasional
rain this morning, scattered
showers this afternoon and to
night. High today 50, low 31
(Conplctt nptrt aff 1)
Judges Inspect Prize
V fo r J V r-
rv.ii. f i
7
,
plralc areaUa-itveiwr. pax)
that they would stay at long
as the West has military in
stallations in West Germany
was aecepted in silence.
Gomulka bluntly attacked
"anti-Soviet sentiment'' mani
fested in demonstrations in
several Polish cities Monday
night when Russian flags
were trampled. He said the
authorities would tolerate no
action against the Polish
state , . ' ' . . '
disenfwtehisement of Negroes in
Mississippi.
"On its face this it a political
move designed to get votes from
the NorthernNegrs'Ltha. gover
nor said.
UF Campaign
To End Nov. 1
Salem's United Tund Drive's
board of directors and represen
tatives from local participating
agencies, voted Wednesday to end
the drive on Nov. 1 and to hold
a victory dinner that night
The decision came after both
groups 'met in the Hotel Marion
to discuss new tactics that would
bring the drive to a successful
close and to set a date for its I
termination. J. ',: ...
Earlier, at a noon report lunch
eon of division chairmen, an ad
ditional 5,190 wis reported
bringing the current total up to
$199,257 or 87 per cent of the
$227,800 goal.
After hearing various sugges
tions on how to get additional
funds, the group voiced unanim
ous approval of a plan offered
by the board of directors. ;
Briefly, at outlined by cam
paign chairman William H. Ham
mond, the plan calls for division
chairmen to examine list of con
tributors who gave last year in
order to - determine who was
skipped this year, or contributed
less in 1958 than in 1855. , . -
The next step would be to draft
a list of volunteer workers who
have been outstanding in their
canvassing in the current and
past campaigns, and to use their
abilities in the lagging divisions.
(Add. details Page!) :
Elvis Close
To Induction
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Oct. 24 UB
Elvis Presley's draft board said
today a routine questionnaire had
been sent the rock V roll singer
to bring hit draft "status up to
date." ,
The 21-year-old Idol of teen
agers said last night he'd received
the questionnaire three weeks ago.
- Winning BuqII
- . v
V Y 'V',
With Dinner
looms behind Judgei (left to right) A. Lars Nelson, Kenneth'
Kendricks and Mollis Seavey, Buell Crangemaster Anthony
Eisele and Sears Foundation executive R. V. Mnller. Buell
Grange is in the running for
hoto and
Budapest Reds
Claim Victory;
Hundreds I)ic. r
By RICHARD KASISCHKE
VIENNA, Oct. 24 APV
Hungary's bloody rebellion' .
against Soviet domination and '
the Budapest Bed leadership
blazed through its second night .
and spread to the provinces.
pictures on wirephoto Page.)
But apparently it was bcinf
crushed systematically tonight by
overpowering Russian armed
force. .
Soviet tanks, planes and troooa
were thrown into the battle for
the decisive blow against the up-
rising workers and students.
Late tonight the Budapest re- ,
gime claimed it had mastered the
rebels but admitted fighting went
on.
Victim Claims
Moscow and East Berlin broad
casts followed quickly with claim!
that the rebels were beaten.
Eyewitnesses returning to Aus
tria from Hungary reported many
hundreds have been killed in bat-
tie. .. ' . ...
Stnd-nls, Werkers
The Austrian travelers said tba
number of dead in Budapest alone J
mounted to many hundreds at -Russian
tanks, Jet planes, machine-
gun batteries and grenades were
thrown against rebel bands com
posed of students and workers.
The Communist government had '
confidently believed the rebels
would collapse by 1 p.m. That was
the time of the first ultimatum
promising amnesty. Then the am
nesty was extended to p.m. Still
the rebels Ignored it defiantly.
. Then the government declared
all-out war. 1 t :1"
no Explanation . .
There was sua no explanation '
from either side of how the rebels
L.J .LI.! J L 1 L.I J
off the combined attack of Rus
sian and Hungarian forces in a
lightning revolt that began after
an orderly : street demonstration
Tuesday. - ' . .
Radio Budapest claimed that the
rebels had machine guns and hand
grenades when they attempted to
smash into a Budapest military
barracks, . .,..
"Using aU the force at their v
command the garrison : repulsed
the attackers," the radio said. It .
added that . the defenders were ',
bracing for a new assault by the .
rebels.. .-.i
Moscew Reaertt t
Moscow radio broke its sllenct :
on the uprising to blame it on ;
"underground reactionary organK
xatkms" and assert that "this en
emy adventure obviously has been
in preparation tome time."
It said, "Enemy elements made
use : a sniaent aerconstrauoB .
which took place Oct. S3 to bring .
into the streets groups previously
prepared by them which formed,
the nucleus of the revolt.. They put
into action agitators who strove to
call forth mast disorder." ., t
The Moscow radio said that the
Hungarian government asked tht
Soviet Union for aid after "Fas
cist thugs let themselves go and ,
began to wot shops ana tried to
destroy the equipment of in
dustrial enterprises."
. With hundreds of ' anti Soviet
rebels reported still lying dead in
Budapest's smoke hazed streets,
the authorities threatened death
to all who continue to fight :
Communists planes were ' r-""
ported swooping low in an attempt .
to blast out die-hard rebels. - .
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Park
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cum '
MkJL-
110,000 national prize, (.Vddl-
tUry - o fago ff ,r-