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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1956)
o Thursday, Norember 22, 1958 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN FAMILIAR PLAINT Litchfield, Me. (U.R) John Thibodeau, 11, told police who found him unharmed after 14 hours in dense Maine woods that he tumbled into a pond and didn't want to go home because his pants were wet. 1 Women of Martyred Hungary Get Much Credit in Country's Stand ' Editor-! sou: Bon Nyiui. resident i saw them brine in hot food, I ing the areaded memory of post-. dishing a huge pistol and order-1 It already ia a hackneyed . Two daya ago a me Three Brothers Meet In Maternity Halls Camdan, N.J. (U.R) Three brother, who bumped into each other In the halls of Cooper Hospital'! maternity ward, should find some sig nificance to the number three from now on. Within 12 hours after they met accidentally, their wives gave birth to three girls whose weights were within three pounds of each other. Hospital authorities said the three couples, Mr. and Mrs. Allen J. Fleming, Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Fleming and Mr. and Mrs, Foryce Fleming, had not known they would be at the hospital at the same lime. I saw them bring in hot food, iwo days ago a messenger correspondent of the Lnited Pres In Budapest and 'mother of two tmall ammunition and primitive band age made of torn up sheets to the "front line" on Moscow Square. But what impressed me perhaps most ia how women of Budapest ignore the Rusian tanks now that the fighting is over. Because teen-age girls who destroyed them during the war were Vsoldiers," they were trained to fight tanks and handle sub-machine guns by the Com munist regime which never thought its plan would backfire and the youngsters use their skill to kill Reds. But the woman on the streets today is a housewife. Most of them still tremble when recall- siege days in 1945, the first time ing us out of our automobile de spite its foreign license plate. phrase that the revolution uni brought a typed invitation from the nursery asking us to attend a performance of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, produced by Julie-Kati and their friends. Grownups from the neighbor hood all in typical postwar at tire, women in slacks, men in overalls sat while the children, all between 8 and 12, recited Shakespeare. The small audi ence, crouching on the floor, sit ting on the few chairs, packed the nursery, forgetting for two hours the horrors of the past weeks, the problems they have to f ace and the T-54 monsters gins, nved tnroucn tne anti-commuut o uprising, the Russians' onslaught and the crlra genera! strike that still 2fl Paralyzes her country. In the follow ' . Ing despatch she tells what llle In Budapest ftieans to women of the shattered Hungarian capital. the Russians occupied this city. And still they ignore the T-54 monsters, run carelessly under the muzzles of their guns and if they look at all, there is only cold hatred in their eyes. I recall Juliska, only 16, her obsolete army rifle as tall as herself, guarding the end of a street near the Kilian barracks. There was immense determina tion on her young face, a face that had never known powder. And the pugnacious, typical "proletarian" woman in another street of the same area, a Hun garian version of Dolores Ibar ruri. La Pasionaria of Spanish fied this nation in a way un known in Hungarian history. When the guns roared in Buda pest's streets my male colleagues shoved me back saying "this is a man's job. You look after the kids," so I retired to the nursery where my two daughters, Julie, 10, and Kati, 9, rule. I admit we didn't look after them too much during the past few weeks. We frantically typed our stories, quarreled with phone operators and devoured some food when and where we could in Russian besieged Budapest. The children didn't bother about us, either. It turned out they were busy, too. Her less warlike male freedom fighters induced her finally to let us go as reporters from the "friendly West" . . . And the ugly little redhead of 14 who headed a gang of three boys that blew up an armored car on Moscow Square with a "Molotov cocktail." What a little she-devil she was . . . And the angel-faced prostitute with the hennaed hair who walked nonchalantly on the same square with a cigarette dangling from her mouth, bandaging the young workers and students while bullets whisteled around her head. yihen you're mixin' villi Br ILONA NYILA3 United Prasi Corraipondent Budapest (U.R) Let me, a woman and a mother, ask you, wwmen of the West, to join me Jn paying tribute to the girls and movtiers of martyred Hungary. I have seen them teen-aged girls fighting tanks and mothers letting them fight, a woman wdrkar patrolling the narrow streets around the Kilian bar rack tui'gging a tommy-gun. . . Shasta youre mixin a I. on the corner with its crew of civil war days. She was bran Asiatics with their blank looks. Ik 1 1 l - r 2 8 3 mi x 'ai J. V V 1 Aft Don't miss our big surprise package sale . . . guaranteed values of at least $3.00 . . . 99c; others at least $5.00 . . . 1.99 ea. tomorrow only! Open the treasure chest and win one of the hundreds of valuable prizes . . . details on page 12 Free pair of hosiery to the first 50 ladies in the store Friday morning. Charges tomorrow payable January 10th. LAY-A-WAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS! . GIRLS ORLON CARDIGAN ... Kitten soft in pastel or dark shades. Sizes m 0 5(79 M4 . . . 5.98 value GIRLS ORLON SLIPON ...... 79 Matching slipon, same high quality, hi-bulk ty An ml a orlon. Sizes 7-14 . . . 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