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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 14, 1956)
o o o ' O. O o o o0 O o o Friday, SmmUr 14, 19SS o o 'Communism Bound p. ?tor'a nou: This is the Utt In a ni iv the on Amrtcao reporter C""av tiivil in Budapest throurn the q .ngrlaJ evolution and its w o" m fty UtELL JONES C Ustsd Prou Correspondent 0 London (U.Pi Ten million lfcngarian,0 armed with little CVne than courage, have handed JS'issia and Communism the most shatter ing defeat. Never again can the Krem lin claim it represents the poor, t h (iowntrodd e n, the exploited. The brutal force that h o 1 a Com munism to Ruafrll Jonfx gether has been exposed for all ; h 'J o the worl4, to see " U Vj-atever terrible puriishmmt the iyiviets inflict on Hungary, in the end'they will lose a few empires in history ever lost be fore, o o For all theif chge of "count-dnr-revtIjon," white terror and O JEhscism, the unconcealable truth is that working men and wom en, inteltuals and youth rose i ipontancousfy and unanimously against them. b Learned of Turmoil Oe? of the grnall satisfactions the! Jjingarian people had lur q ing the revolt was to learn from foigign radio stations of the tur moil thei (Uprising caused in Comnom?st0 parties throughout the world. . O Porr F vpr. correspondent of London's Daily Worker, reached the end of his Communist rope in Budapest. His paper refused to print his blunt dispatches about ne Soviet attack. So one night, seated in the British lega tion, he wrote his esignation while Russian taks patrfllled the seet out.-sVie. o Even tha Hardest A-l I know that even hard ened Communists like $arm Rus- ell, o'ho recced Fry", ajid Andre Stil of the French Com munist iper. b'Hu!ianite, were deeply embarrassed by the open hatrejjof the Hungarians for the Soviets and all things Commun ist. What milit the masses of Asia and Africa think now? Aijd in the other East Euro q pgPn satellites what do they think now of Nikita Khrush chev's "sfparate roads to Social ism?" The whole world knows that the roads led to the same place .QIt has taken the Hungari ans point out that all signposts Cpoint tcPlloscow. Nothing so infuriates the Hun garians now as the feeble Com munist efforts to portray their uprising as the work of Capital $9 and Fascists. I remember the iron workt who said to me: "Look. I'm the capitalist try ing to back his factory." '$s cn;S wasaeld trcther by tnng.Th knees of his trousers were patched an patched again. He wore no socks. Or the women who defied So vij tanks and machineguns to lay flowers at the tomb of the unknrtS?! soldiers. These were the wynen who marched alone, Record sgia " ' hen they look at the records V f "'. unJr.the tree, they'll be W t '9 i Q o delighted ! Our selection includes disks X V designed to please everyone from the rock V roll fan tg the devotee of the classics everything i from single Records to complete albums. Come, see, hear and choose here and now. nTH&V o fArrxr&k BOOKS GIFTS RECORDS I " ' ; I o " who insisted their men itay in doors, and dared the Russians to shuot them. Or the Hungarian soldiers, who, under orders, stood with Red army men at checkpoints. One took our papers out of a Russian's hands, saying: "This bastard doesn't understand. He can t even read." As we started away, he called: "Run over the bastard." At another road check, I was accompanied by a Hungarian woman and her daughter. The Hungarian soldier examined my papers, then started to ask about women. His gaze caught mine, and he suddenly said: "Your wife and daughter are all right. Get go ing." He e.Ibowed his Soviet com panion out of the way and let us pass. What can the Soviets do about people like these? They can continue their pres Hunt Continues for Coos Flood Victims; Streams Fall Slowly By UNTED PRESS Search continued today for the bodies of two victims re ported drowned in Coos county this week in the first serious Oregon flooding of the season. The weather bureau said all streams would fall slowly in the next two or three days except for a slight rise in the lower Snake and little change in the Willamette from Salem to Ore gon City today. The Willamette came up more than four feet at Albany but was still more than three feet under flood stage. It had dropped a foot at Corvallis. Creek Back in Channel Bulldozer crews near Oak- Clues Sought in Gang Style Death New York UK Fifty detec tives sifted through the family connections and questioned busi ness associates of Meyer Mester today for a slim clue to his gang land style murder. The millionaire olive oil dealer was found dead in his Cadillac Thursday. He had been shot four tunes in the back of the head. The car, with its lights on and motor running, was parked in a lonely area on the Brooklyn waterfront a few blocks from the offices of the Balbo Oil Corrtpany, which he and his brother, Murray, operated. Mester's body was found slumped on the right side of the front seat. His- wallet was in his left hand. It contained a sum of money and he had S40 more in his pocket. An expensive watch and cuff links were not dis turbed Police discounted robbery as a motive for the shooting and began an investigation of his business life for ' clues to his murder. to Be Loser in Hungary Revolution, Russell Jones Says0 ent policy of military occupa tion, hoping the Hungarians will starve themselves into submis sion.' They can institute a reign of terror to drive the people back to work. They can take over the plants themselves, using slave labor or even Soviet soldiers to work the machines. Can Break Finest Spirit Which they will try I do not know. Even the bravest man must have food for his family and even the finest spirit can be broken. Perhaps the Soviets can force a semblance of order. But. having seen what I have seen, I must believe against all logic and reason that the Hun garians will win. So much of the impossible al ready has happened that it could end in a way that now seems impossible in freedom for a people who have shown so clear ly they are second to none in their love of it. ridge managed to get Salmon creek back into its channel yes terday after it threatened to flood six homes. It had eaten away about 80 feet of its bank and nearly cut through an old dry channel where the homes are located. Southern Pacific railroad re ported train service back on schedule. Latest Coos county victim was 19-year-old Melvin Atwell of Co quillc who was reported drowned in Fat Elk creek while duck hunting. Searchers still hunted the body of Edward L. St. Dennis of Coos Bay who was lost when a boat capsized Tues day. The weather bureau said Pa cific storms are moving to the north but that a new system probably would bring rain to Oregon by late Saturday. Rain or snow is expected east of the Cascades by late Saturday or Sunday. Highways To Be Opened All Oregon highways blocked by washouts were expected to open to light traffic sometime today, the State Highway De partment reported. Highway officials said the Willamette highway which had been blocked 14 miles east of Oakridge would open to one way traffic about 1 p.m. McKenzie highway, blocked at Elk creek bridge, will open to all traffic about 5 p.m. with one-way traffic at the bridge. The Coos Bay-Roseburg high way was open all the way to light traffic with only minor de lays reported. The National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., is the larg est completely air-conditioned art museum in the world. The controlled atmosphere has great ly increased the life expectancy of its art treasures. Use Tribune Want Ads HORNBROOK Anniversaries By MRS. H. H. CHAPMAN Hornbrook Two recent wed ding anniversaries highlight the news from Hornbrook this week. One. on Dec. 5, marked the 42nd for Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ohlund, who were honored Sun day, Dec. 9 at a dinner at the home of their son and daughter-in-law in Yreka, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ohlund and children. Also present were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fiock of the Shasta River road, parents of Mrs. Rob ert Ohlund. Mr. and Mrs. Oh lund were married in Portland, Dec. 5, 1914, and lived there for the next 19 years, after which they moved to Hilts, where they lived for a number of years. Ohlund retired about two years ago after 23 years with the Fruit Growers Supply com pany of Hilts, and he and Mrs. Ohlund moved to Hornbrook, where they make their home on Cottonwood creek. Ohlund is a master in the art of cabinet making, and has made several outstanding pieces of furniture for their home. Nov. 30, 1899 was the date on which Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Tyrer were married in a ceremony sol emnized by the Rev. Fr. O'Mera of St. Joseph's Catholic church of Yreka, at the home of Mrs. Tyrer's parents, at what is now the Lucas ranch. Mrs. Tyrer was the former Grace E. Williams. Tyrer was from Colorado, where he and his father followed the mining business. After their marriage,, they moved into their own home, about a mile up the Klamath river from her parents' home. Later they moved into Hornbrook, and have been in their present home since 1935. Tyrer continued to follow mining and was active in the operation of the Jilson gold mine in Henley. For a number of years he was employed by the highway department, and was foreman of the crew that built the first modern highway over the Siskiyous into Oregon. Four children were born to the Tyrers, of whom two are living. They are their two old est sons, Charles Evans Tyrer, of Sacramento, and Otis Tyrer of W SPECIAL! SAVE $1800 REGULAR 59.95 VALUE Skan 35mm 300 Watt SLIDE PROJECTOR ONLY SKAN 300 Automatic Changing v'Redi-tilt" Elevation Easy Knob Focusing "Full Power" 300 Watt Lamp Blower Cooled Lift Off Carrying Case Die Cast Durability COMPLETER On? SAVE 1800 Hurry! Limited Supply 1 a tmvz- Observed Dunsmuir. Mrs. Tyrer recently celebrated her loin mrtnaay, and Mr. Tyrer will observe his 87th next May I. Although both have failing sight now, they manage to take care of them selves and their house and yard, their chickens, and their pair ot pet ducks. However, Mrs. Tyrer is quick to point out that much of the credit for their managing so well should be given to their "three wonderful daughters-in-law," two of whom live in Yre ka. and make frequent trips out to help, and to look after them. "Ma" and "Dad" Tyrer, as they are affectionately known, hav ing lived here all the 57 years of their married life, are be loved residents of the commu nity, and all are concerned in their welfare. Recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bear were Mr. and Mrs. Steve Jones of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. They are relatives of Mrs. Bear s whom she had not seeu for 30 years. They were enroute to Palm Springs, Calif., for the winter, a trip they have made annually for the past ten years. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Breceda and infant son Larry, of Ash land, spent the weekend at the home of Gene's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Breceda. Mrs. Emma Parshall, who suf fered a fall at home last week and was in the hospital in Yreka for several days, is back home now and up and around. In the Sunday edition of the Medford Mail Tribune, the date of their births was omitted from the announcements of the arrivals of the new additions to the families of Mr. and Mrs. Don Burns, and Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Clyburn. Both babies were born on Sunday, Dec. 2. Mrs. Paul Greene returned Sunday afternoon from River side, Calif., where she had spent the past two weeks visiting her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Heflick and sons Tommy, Davey, and baby Jon who was born during the sum- AUTOMATIC CAMERAS PHOTOGRAPHS 4 195 120 East Main St. Four Bodies Cut Out of Concrete Miami Beach (U.R) Workers using air hammers cut the last of four bodies out of concrete late Thursday night, many hours after a 32-ton concrete-mixer truck flipped over and pinned them into an excavation. Three of the screaming men died quickly, but the fourth, Alfred Barnes, 40, stayed alive for three hours and 25 minutes. All four were Negroes. The truck driver, Ernest B. Greer, 47, escaped without in jury but was shaken by the ex perience. "I heard the men screaming when the truck went over" he said. The lower two-thirds of Barnes' body was pinned be- mer Mrs. Heflick is the former Roberta Greene. Mrs. Greene also spent some time with her sister, Mrs. Clyde Timmons of Riverside, and in San Jacinto she visited her mother, Mrs. Anna Potter. . Mrs.'Loren Cummins attended the Christmas party and meet ing of CTamma Nu chapter of Del ta Kappa Gamma society held Saturday, Dec. 8 at the home of Mrs. Bell Newton in Yreka". The Rev. Gordon Titus pre sented a color film entitled "Contrary Winds" at his Horn brook Bible church Tuesday evening. A gift whole family M1XMASYER Enjoy higher, lighter, finer textured cakes; creamier mashed potatoes, etc. Larger bowl-fit beaters. Saves time, arm-work, mixes, mashes, whips, beats, stirs, blends, juices, etc Available in five new colors Chrome, White, Pink, Turquoise or Yellow. (Sunbeam TOASTER Patented RADIANT CONTROL grr uniform toast whether bread is thick oi thin, frozen or fresh, rye or white. Auto matic Berond Belief. 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