Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 10, 1956)
O o o o o 00 o O C? o o o o 0 cv. o o o O o & o o o O O o o o r. o O - r cof o o o C j o c o C C c o o o 0 oo O c OS, f o 0 o O E?2 n K H iiissia-insigaieo nevoid fcrew Out of Hand, Jones Editor's ncO: Thu dupatrh 1 from the one Arn-rlran reporter 4V rajinrd tn tdapt throucb tha height of revrilution and its aupprsion. Eplltd last week af ter 37 dav tiiere. he writes theQ ttorle he ):ld not ftle before. This la the first of five. O f RUSSEtL JONES United Pres Correspondent London-'U.Rj A final spark is always needed to inflame men to the point where they are will ing to lose their lives in" a fight for liberty. Peop. the world sver are ask ing whence cgme titt tpark in Hungary. What could rsfve Hungarian men, women aro children to claw with bare hands at Con munist 'iks w.d troops, o that I am out of Hungary and free of censorship? I can write what many people in Buda pest believe Si be true: Communist rulers of Hungary provoked an demonstration. oanti-Communist Their idea was to kinATe Small fire, to release some rj the smouldering passion and tnen to stamp it out so ruthlessly no one would dare try aga.. JEngulft All of Hungary But it flamed iiotead until it engulfed Ail of Sudapei, then the whole of Hungary and until pits tongue was scorching even j. Krcmlfii. It has been damp ened do n but it is not out yet! cO The men believed behind it iV Ernoe oeroe, the hated :iuiiin:r.i aiciaiorcoi Hungary, tiose friend of Eeriaa ThereJ is O evitence "roe plotted with the O O Russians to start the revolt and kail lt. As a Bolshevik since 19, (tfa&ed in Moscow' as late as 1944, (j.e rd the experience forj. can cite these facts: Th first Rurinpcl Homnn- itraln came onoOct. 23. 3. Yet on Oct. 21 two days earlier Soviet tank forces O which fiter appeared in Hungary ,tarted moving out from the Kiev "area. MAKE THIS lUi TO KEMEMBER o PRINCE GARDNER V REGISTRAR O 0 J JLemovable pass case with Add-A-Pass Bar for adding more windows for cards, photos, etc. Leather tvered duplicate key slots. with Concealed Wioney flap. Extra srarnjj and ticket pockets. Handsome leathers, his colors. G your money's worrh for your giTt PRJSCE CAUDSEK alctaJ br ) 'AH INVISHH SfirCH- match a set for her... 003 - ." Ill - c . ' I- - , PM ' ' ft ' - - '- ':? f) I O i..'jrT 'i,- o A 6. l! h j. The Continental French Purse. $!"00 if roomjr coin purs, pick-i-bill slot J The Registrar B!ifold . (aor illustrated) o The Key Gard, Zipper closing (i) o X '!. S. A Russian mechanized di - vision that fought in Hungary left its barracks near Rimoso- ara, Romania, on Oct. 22. 4. Soviet troops in Hungary it- self were alerted at 2 p.m. on Oct. 23 and were on the road to Budapest by 6 p.m.. four hours before the massacre at Parlia ment Square. Meets Appropriate End 5. That night Geroe himself went on the radio to assail the demonstrators as "counter-revolutionaries." In that stroke he condemned what he knew was a popular uprising, removed any hope for an easing of the regime and guaranteed a violent show down. ' I Geroe met an appropriate end. The Budapest radio reported on Nov. 4 tiiat he had been "mur dered in a barbarous fashion" by the revolutionaries. He was j attempting to escape to Russia. No one had better motive for getting away. And no one knew better that Hungary was ripe i for a "small"' revolt, but he had ' so suppressed the-nation that its mood was one of desperation. Prices were impossible. Stores were barren. The secret police ! had curtailed more liberties with j each year for 10 years. i And then standing before : them was the example of the : successful protest of the Poles against the Warsaw regime and ' the Russians. The greatest shock to the Hun-1 garian Communists and their I Kussian masters must have been ! the type of people who fought the hardest. Not a Misguided Uprising Believe none of the stories I that this was a misguided upris- ing fomented to restore the great ' estate owners of the Horthy j regency or the industrial mag- nates. I saw with my own eyes who was fighting and heard with my edrs why they fought. The first armed resistance came from students of the Bill divider money AS f A jf fJplu, tax V r ' V- - e Complere assortment of Prince Garrlner Billfolds. Key Gards, Pocket Secretaries. Fergian rrincess Gahna Cowhide glowing with tiny "jewels" o 3 br PRINCESS CLRDNER 500 . . $2.93 o 23 I aff Declares , schools and universities, the ! youths who had been so carefully j selected as the party elite of the j future. i The fiercest fiehters were the worners, me proletarians in whose name Communism had ruled. Even the Hungarian army, purged and repurged a dozen times, joined the battle for free dom or sat on the sidelines. The two big names that came out of the revolt were Commu nist Imre Kagy, a lifelong party member, and Lt. Col. Pal Ma leter who had deserted to the ; Russians in World War II end returned as a Red partisan. Yes, wherever came the spark, it found its tinder among the common people. Ike Completes Work on Budget; Drafts Message Augusta, Ga. (U.R) President Eisenhower today completed his financial work on the 1958 bud get and began the laborious task of drafting a budget message for the new Congress. Budget Director Percival Brundage who conferred with the President here over the week end,, said as he flew back to Washington, "we have finished the totals." What Brundage meant was that the President and his chief administration advisers have settled on a total for the budget in the upcoming fiscal year. Have 'Big Figures' "We now have all the totals the big figures," Brundage told a reporter. "Now we must bring them together and start work on the message itself." Brundage declined to guess for publication at the size of the new budget, saying, "after all this work, we'll just have to wait for the printed version." Brundage, who conferred here with the President, Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson and Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of the Atomic Energy Commission, said the new budget, of neces sity, was completed and would start to the government printing office by Dec. 15. Will M?et Nehru Mr. Eisenhower, who has been here since Nov. 26. planned to return to Washington next Thursday afternoon. After a briefing by State Department of ficials, he will receive Indian Prime Minister Nehru next Sun day afternoon. The President issued a state ment late Sunday asking the na tion to join in observance of United Nations Human Rights Day with a "resolve that the world shall never forget what tyranny has done'' in Hungary. The President expressed the "horror and revulsion" felt by free peoples at the Soviet bru tality toward the Hungarians. Clinton Students Return To School As Police Watch Clinton, Tenn. (U.R) Clinton High school's 700 students re turned to integrated classes to day under the watchful eyes of city police, sheriff's officers and FBI agents. Some 20 miles southeast of Clinton, in Knoxville, a federal judge began formal arraignment of 16 persons two of them women accused of instigating ! the racial trouble that closed the school last Tuesday. The FBI began investigating segregationist activities in Clin ton last week. Police said they understood federal agents will be on the scene today as "ob . servers." Police said they expected no trouble but warned that anyone who starts any will "get nailed hard." County Attorney Eugene L. Joyce said school officials will "dramatize" the federal govern ment's stand 'by reading a U.S. District Court injunction forbid ding interference with integra tion. Sixteen persons charged with taking part in such interference since the school was integrated last September were ordered to appear before Federal Judge Robert L. Taylor. Appeals for Ordar A plea for law and order in Clinton was sounded from the pulpit Sunday by the Rev. Paul Turner. 33-year-old Baptist min ister whose beating by segrega tionists last Tuesday preceded the school closing by a few hours. Turner was beaten after he escorted six Negro pupils to the school in a "safety brigade" with two other white men. An overflow congregation of 650 persons thronged the young minister's church. BEST FOR KITCHEN Floor coverings best for use in the kitchep are linoleum, plastic, vinyl- and wood if it's 'Accused Murderers Hunled in New Jersey Bridgetown, N.J. 'U.R Au thorities today hunted two ac cused murderers who escaped from a maximum security jail cell. The two fugitives fled with two other prisoners early Sun day after sawing their way through a steel plate in the ceil ing of the cell with a hack saw blade. Two of the escapees. Lee Roy Norton, 38, of Meadow Creek. Tenn., and Joseph Littles, 28, were captured hours after the break. Police identified the hunted men as Cleararthur Rainey. 18, of Bridgewater. and Alonzo Wal ker, 50, of Philadelphia. TREATY RATIFIED Moscow (U.R) Tass News Agency said today the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet (parlia ment) has ratified the Japanese Soviet joint declaration and protocol ending the 11-year state of war between the two coun tries. The Japanese Diet has al ready ratified the document. HOUSEWIVES! Want a Spie and Span House for the Holidays? CALL EXPERT CLEANING SERVICE PHONE '-4901 or 2-4257 Specialized House Cleaning! Walls Woodwork Floors Cleaned and Waxed Furniture and Rugs Cleaned SPECIAL HOLIDAY RATES! FREE ESTIMATES! Many Years Experience Phone Us Today 1 KM a I i4 Ffl Bra .7.fl EM aY. 12 M W. .1M W w w ' Just 27 lbs. . . . quality and picture-perfection of a full-sized 21" Console. Exclusive PRECISION-EERED-power features are your assurance of bright, clear pictures . . . even out-of-doors. It's all aluminum ... in your choice of Smoke Gray, Turquoise and Sand, Terra Cotta and Sand. gww,,)..nuj u.j.iiii.ii iMaTOyy!aajaaiffawaaaawwaaaCT ' " . Zft U , 4 J - ' J i I ' ' It , ; . fA t i WATCH WESTINGHOUSE WHERE Ho mm Hall Seei No Chang In U. S. Foreign Policy Washington U.R) Repub lican National Chairman Leon ord W Hall does not believe the appointment of Christian A. Her ter as undersecretary of state signals any basic change in U.S. foreign policy. Hall also said Sunday that he wouldn't be surprised if Vice President Richard M. Nixon were given additional responsi bilities by President Eisenhower. But he refused to speculate on Nixon's role in the 1960 GOP presidential race. Columbia Pictures Co-Founder Succumbs New York (U.R) Funeral services will be held Tuesday for Jacjc Corn, 67, co-founder and vice president of Columbia Pictures Corp. Cohn. who started in the mo vie industry as a S7-a-week la boratory assistant in 1908, died Saturday of a heart attack sev eral days after undergoing min or surgery. Dead line Sunday Classlfled la ar noon Saturday lu a.m Monday tor Monday, other davs 530 orev.ous da The NEW -1' ONLY TERMS mm Monday, CecsmW 18. 15 Holmes Opposes Pelion Dam in Waltonian Address Eugene (U.R) Goversor- elect Robert Holmes, making his ; first major public address since j being elected, told delegates to ! the state Izaak Walton conven-J tion here Saturday night that "Pelton dam was and is, in my opinion, the wrong dam in the wrong place at the wrong time." ; Holmes cited the Pelton dam : question as an example in mak-' ing plain his views on the use ; of natural resources. j In the Deschutes project, he said, "You have a practical mat ter of people wanting and need- j ing electric power; these people allied against others who saw in 1 the development of hydro-pow-: er the certain destruction of oth er great values." Forest Conservation Urged Holmes told the group that politicians wish issues such as the Pelton dam question would never come up. But they do, he said, and must be met. He re minded the group of his own stand that the dam would result in "irreparable harm to a great 1 fisheries resource for. the limit ed kilowatts involved." j The governor-elect also call ed for conservation of the state's forests. "I am determined to do all I can to see that reforestation projects are expanded and speeded up," Holmes said. j Opposition to the proposed Nez Perce dam on the Snake river was voiced at the conven tion. The league said that about ' (Price Incl. Fed. tax & warranty) BiO THINGS AR HAPPENING FOR pft 29 fo'per venfof tierun of sdiOiz chinocik salmon 0 which opassesjj over .Bonneville dam spawn in waters above the proposedc3ez Perce site. Sam Huichinon. as sistant regional cJ!rctor ofths U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service told delegates the dam wou -isrz ' m.' Southern Oregon's Largest and ' Most Complete Cycle Shop Performs ' where others fail! ...In difficult suburban and city areas '.. . in broad daylight! Westinghgus T AISLE MODELS o o THE ADAMS: New 21-Inch Teble Mfjdel with exclusiv "Sculptured e "Styling." PRECISIONEERED ith "Silver Safeguard Chassis" for lc;r- G lasting, more reliable performance . . unmatched v'ap enjoy ment Simplified Tip-Top-Front-Juning; Alumifyzed Picture Tube. Ma- hogany finish. o c, 0 O (Swivel Base Optional) 'Overall tba0diagonJmeasuremefit. o 0Q , only f OPEN VOUt w. - - NIGHTS UNTIL 3 HtDFORD (OREGON MAILUTRIBUNE FIVE do irreparably damage to the :gnu salmn0rn. ur. Augea j. .ureii, foriiana, was glected president of the state division of ti ItAgue with Al 'anL. Kelly, Portland, reelect d secretag; and fiomer $mith, lood River, nard treasurer. Triumph Ariel- Inrfiein HOTOftCiCLEt mm mm iifitirnr o o o Jnr lj I I C j ' 36Soutt? Bar!l ' o 6 o O oO .gflljl ModelMT170 14" over-all tube iagonal. oPiSure tuba area 105.4 sq. in. o o ft.. n O o o o WEDNESDAY oo O o o e 6 - w -. 7 I C II 1 0 o c (l o 0 O o (I .oo ft o treated with penetratina oil j sealer. o o o o O O O O o o 0