Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1960)
Local and Attends Meeting - Dr. and Mrs. D. P. Phillips, Medford, attended the Oregon Veterin ary Medical association con ference in Portland recently. Convalescing Mrs. Louis Arnold, route 1, box 24, Jack sonville, is convalescing at Rogue Valley hospital follow ing surgery today. Permits Issued The city building department recently issued Dan Patch three build ing permits to erect residences for $13,900 at 813 Ellen ave., for 512,800 at 853 Ellen ave., and for $13,200 at 833 Ellen ave. Correction Women of Ro tary will meet Wednesday, Feb. 10, rather than Feb. 13 as was stated in Sunday's issue. The meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Leonard Mayfield, 1 Black Oak drive. Hubcaps Stolen Ronald Lester Robinson, 1552 Stew art ave., told city police that four hubcaps valued at $25 were stolen from his vehicle while it was parked on River side ave., between Main and Eighth sis., Friday. Medical Patient Mrs. Miriam E. Ward, 909 East Jackson st. and operator of Miriam's Beauty shop, is a medical patient at Rogue Val ley hospital. While she is hos pitalized the shop will remain closed, it was reported. Bicycle Damaged A bi cycle belonging to David Eu gene Eachron, 517 North Barneburg rd., was found on the playground at Roosevelt school by city police Satur day with the seat slashed with what appeared to be a knife and the wheels broken as if the bicycle had been dropped from a great height, police said. Stolen Mailbox - Warner Joseph Beems, 44 Willamette ave., told city police that a mailbox was taken from his front porch Friday night or Saturday morning. Police found cnother abandoned mailbox on Willamette ave., between Main and Ninth sts. Saturday and returned it to its owner at 214 Willamette ave. Flue Fire Firemen were summoned about 8:40 a.m. to day when a flue fire occurred at the Richard A. White home, 227 North Ross lane. They were also called when oil stoves overheated about 8:20 a.m. at the residence of Vernon C. St. George, 346 South Holly st., and about 8:50 ajn. at the home of Mrs. Clara McGee, 801 North Cen tral ave. FDGEOF cornel WILDE .VICTORIA SHAW HERN" HICHIT SntUCHHESXT ...-. COLOR YESTERDAYS ENEMY STANLEY BAKER EDWINA CARROLL" r "TELL US ABOUT THE FREE WORLD!" This is a direct quote in a letter received from Romania. Yes, the people living in captive nations behind the Iron Curtain want to know about the Free World .. . want to know the truth. And RADIO FREE EUROPE is doing a great job in bringing the truth to them. '- But RADIO FREE EUROPE reeds your help to remain on the air! Your dollars are needed. Dollars that pay for transmitters, announcers and news analysts. Don"t let the Reds cut off cap tive peoples behind the Iron Curtain from the truth. Keep the truth alive by keeping RDIO FREE EUROPE on the air! Send your truth dollars to: CRUSADE FOR FREEDOM co Local Postmaster Medford Mail Tribune I 1 r i Personal Money stolen An Ore gonian paperboy; Donald Ray James, 321 Benson st., had ap proximately $15 stolen from him Saturday, he told police, j He said the money had been collected from his paper route and was apparently taken from a bag on his. bicycle while he was in a store keep ing out of the rain. Births HARTUNG - To Mr. and Mrs. William E., Central Pointy Feb. 6, 1960, girl, 7 pounds, at Sacred Heart hos pital. VOSS - To Mr. and Mrs. Lester W., route 3, 169 Elm St., Medford, Feb. 7, 1960, boy, 6 pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Showery through Tuesday. Low tonight 38 40. High Tuesday 50. Western Oregon: Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday morning. In creasing cloudiness Tuesday after noon with rain beginning along coast. Mild temperatures. Low to night 38-46. High Tuesday 50-60. Northern California : Occasional rain tonight and Tuesday. Heavy amounts on Sierra-Nevadas to night. Snow level lowering to 5,000 to 7,000 feet. LOCAL DATA Temperature: Mean yeesteray 50; above normal 9. Record high this date 63 in 1954. Record low this date 14 in 1929. Precipitation: 24 hours to mid night .20 in. Midnight to 10 a.m. .58 in. Total this month 1.80 in., 1.25 in. above normal. Total since Sept. 1 6.48 in., 4.94 in. below normal. Humidity: Lowest yesterday 66, nignest this a.m. m . High 4:00 24- City Yester- a.m. hr. day Low Prec. Brookings : 57 50 1.02 Crater Lake 34 25 1.85 Grants Pass 55 48 1.25 Klamath- Falls 40 36. .59 MEDFORD 55 48 .66 Portland 57 44 .39 Seattle 52 40 .07 Spokane 42 29 Yakima 55 30 .10 Eureka 61 55 1.58 Red Bluff 57 49 1.34 Sacramento 59 55 .22 San Francisco 63 57 . .10 Los Angeles 65 53 T Phoenix 70 43 Denver ..... 59 39 Chicago 32 26 Miami Beach 74 50 New York 42 24 Washington. D.C. 44 30 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through Feb. 13): Western Oregon-Western Wash' Ington Continued mild with tem peratures averaging much above normal and precipitation more than normal through Saturday. High temoeratures 50-55 western Wash ineton and 52-60 western Oregon. Lows in 40s. Total precipitation 1- 2 inches with local amounts Heavi er on coast. Northern California Rain from time to time with snow in high mountains. Temperatures normal or above. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) (USDA1 CatUe 1400. Good under 1100 lb. fed steers 25-26; mostly choice Boi lb. fed heifers 25 with some at 967 lb. 23.50; good-choice 843-955 lb. 24: utility cows 13.50-15; can- ners-cutters 10-12. Calves 150. Good-choice vealer 28-32: some 33: standard 22-27: cull-utility 12-21; good-choice stock calves 25-27. Hogs 1150. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers 180-235 lb. 15.25-15.50: mixed 1, 2 and 3 lots 14.50-15: 270 lb. 13.50; No. 1 and 2 sows 277-340 lb. 12-13. Sheeo 500. Good-choice fall shorn and wooled lambs 19-19.50: fed lambs 17.75: good-choice 76-89 lb feeder lambs 17.75-18; ewes 3.50-7. Portland Produce . Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Butter To retailers: AA and Grade A prints. 68c lb.; carton, lc higher: B prints. 66c. Cheese, medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single daisies.- 44-51c: processed Ameri can cheese. 5-lb. loaf. 4334-44c. Eees To retailers: Grade AA extra large. 49-50c; AA large. 44 47c: A large 42-46c: AA medium, 40-45c: AA small, 31-39c; cartons, l-3c additional. Dressed chickens: No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: fryers, whole drawn 36-40c lb.; cut-up 41-43C lb.; hens heavy type whole drawn. 3o 40c lb.: light type hens cut up 32- 33c; whole 27-31C lb. Over-the-Counter Western Stocks The following bid and ask ed quotations, from the Na tional Association of Securi ties Dealers, Inc., do not rep resent actual transactions. They a-e a guide to the range within which these securities could have been sold (indi cated by the "bid") or bought (indicated by the "asked") at the time of compilation. Common Stocks Bid Bank of America 47Ai Calif-Pacific Utilities 202 Cascades Plywood 32 'i Cons Freightways 195 Copco : 33' 2 Cyprus Mines Corp 253 Asked 50', 22 34', 20', 355, 27 2 61 33' 2 19, 38 V 23 29 ?i 71 40', 25, 415, First National Bank 57 Morrison-Knudsen 31 Northwest Nat Gas 18 Pacific Pwr & Lt 36 Permanente Cement 21'i Portland Gen Elec 28 US National Bank 663i United Utilities 38 i West Coast Tel 24, Weyerhaeuser 39 U CONNECTICUT CLERK DIES Hartford, Conn. (UPD Fran cis H. Wessel, 65, chief clerk to 10 Connecticut governors, died Sunday in a hospital. His wife died in her sleep at home at approximately the same time. sly The Small, Secretive Shrew Is the Only Venomous Animal 'The taming of the shrew' is an impossibility. These tiny but vicious little demons are too high strung to live in cap tivity. . Shrews are so secretive few people ever see them, yet they are present in forests and fields. They are our smallest mammals. A full grown one is about one third the size of a mouse. Close examination reveals several differences be tween them and the mice. The shrew has a sharp, pointed head and small, almost invisi ble ears. Some have short tails while other species have no tail at all. They have soft gray fur, and eyes that look as if the little animal were constantly squinting. Even when the lit tle fellow is listening his head is seldom still. It moves from side to side and the sensitive nose twitches constantly." Must Eat Often The body processes of the shrew are geared so high they must eat at frequent intervals to keep from starving to death. This hunger drive keeps them in a feverish search for food day and night from the time they are born until they die. The high pow ered drive makes the shrew a vicious killer, with the courage and daring to attack animals several times its own size. The little demon will hunt until he finds a mouse, dash at it with a flashing rush, sink its sharp teeth into the victim's body and hang on like a bulldog. But the mouse is up against something he cannot fight. Even if he gets loose and tries to escape by flight he can go but a few feet before his legs give way and he falls in a helpless heap. By the time the shrew arrives, the mouse is dead. All the time the shrew will be twittering shrilly, almost like a bird. Death comes to the mouse from the poison injected into the wound by the shrew's venomous teeth. The shrew is the only ven omous mammal known to ex ist in the entire world. At the base of the needle-sharp teeth in the little creature's mouth are salivary glands that se crete a deadly venom, similar to the venom of the coral snake. ; One puncture of the skin and the little mouse is past all hope. For some strange reason, probably in stinctive, mice seem to know what will happen to them if they are in close contact with a shrew. When caged up to gether in close quarters, a mouse becomes frantic and has been known actually to die of fright. Dies in Cage Neither can the shrew be keDt alive for lone - a few hours at most. The nervous excitement under which he lives burns him tip in a short time. Besides the little crea ture would have to be fed ev ery few minutes. The shrew's food consists mostly of in sects. They are particularly fond of beetles, worms, snails and small animals such as froes. mice or even small birds. Even in death this tiny ani mal-ogre takes a diabolical revenge on those few crea tures that would prey on him When a shrew dies a power ful musk smell makes the body unpalatable to would-be predators. Even the house cat that catches a shrew once in a while, will seldom eat one, It's probably a good thing the shrew is so small; other wise with his vicious nature he could be a dangerous wild animal. And they never live very long. They age fast be cause of nervous energy. He Investment Funds Noon funds: Fund Bullock quotations on selected Bid AskeB 12.48 13.68 ChemFund 10.52 Colonial Ener 12.33 11.38 13.48 24.81 16.31 9.25 13.34 10.23 10.56 8.24 16.85 10.47 14.84 19.82 1233 14.49 13.71 14.50 8.17 5.81 14.73 Eaton Howard Stk 23.20 Fidelity 15.09 Group Sec A via - Elec 8.44 Group Sec Com Stk 12.18 Group Sec Petr . 934 Group See Steel 9.6 Group Sec Tobac 7.52 Keystone B-3 . 15.44 Keystone B-4 Keystone K-2 Keystone S-l 9.59 13.60 18.16 11.29 13.28 12.56 13.41 7.50 532 13.51 Keystone S-2 Keystone S-3 ; Keystone S-4 Mass Inv Grth Stk TV-Elec Value Line Inc Wellington o. Small Worlds Around Us . By Lynn M. Watkins burns himself up In about one years time. Nothing that runs at top speed day and night can last very long. His is a short lif e-and a vicious one. (Released by The Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1960) Funeral Wednesday For Mrs. Beeson Talent Mrs. Marian S. Beeson, 62, wife of Everett Beeson of Talent, died early Sunday morning at the family residence. She was born July 28, 1897, in Union, Ore. Mrs. Beeson was a school teacher and was author of sev eral textbooks. She was a member of the Daughters of the Nile, Lady Elks of Ash land; Alpha chapter, Order of Eastern Star; College Wom en's club, and Jackson Coun ty Retired Teachers associ ation. She moved to the Talent area in 1914 and was grad uated in 1915 from Ashland High school. She married Everett Beeson in Browns boro June 11, 1919. She is survived by her hus band, one , son, Emmett W. (Bill) Beeson, Talent, and three grandchildren. Funeral services will be Wednesday, Feb. 10, at 10:30 a.m. Litwiller's Funeral home, Ashland. Obituaries ADDIE L. ELDER Ashland - Addie L. Elder, 74, of 625 B st., Ashland,.died Sunday evening at a . local hospital. She was born Sept. 17, 1875, in Parkland, Wash. She is survived by her hus band, James R. Elder, Ash land; one son, Gilbert Elder, Ashland; two daughters, Mrs. Mildred Kerby, Burney, Calif, and Mrs. Lillian Edsall, Chilo quin; five grandchildren and eight great grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Ethel Sta mos, San Francisco; Mrs. Edna Young, Redwood City, Calif.; and Mrs. Amy Banks, and a brother, Floyd Smith, both Paradise, Calif. Mrs. Elder came to Ashland in 1919 from Tacoma, Wash. She married James Elder on Oct. 24, 1905. She was a mem ber of the "Assembly of God church, Ashland, for 38 years. Funeral services will be held Tuesday, Feb. 9, at 1:30 p.m. in Litwiller's Mountain View chapel with the Rev. R. L. . Cornwall officiating. In terment will be in Mountain View cemetery. NORMAN M. WIREN Norman M. Wiren, 50, died this morning at the Veterans Administration Domicili a r y, Camp White. Funeral ar rangements will be announc ed by the Perl Funeral home. Farm Message Due on Tuesday Washington TJPD President Eisenhower will send his spe cial farm message to Congress Tuesday, the White House an nounced today. The message outlining the administration's recommenda tions for new farm legislation has been waited for several weeks. It was learned last week that it had been delayed be cause of protests of several Republican wheat state sena tors who argued that the pro posed plans, would be unfair to wheat growers. Although the farm problem is expected to become a top issue in the 1960 presidential campaign, key congressmen said they foreseee .little chance of any new legislation being enacted this session. MacArthur Said reeling oener New York-flJPD-Gen. Doug las MacArthur, hospitalized with a urinary disorder, is feeling better. He has been sitting in an arm-chair enjoy ing an occasional game of par chsi with his wife. The five-star general, who was taken to Lenox Hill Hos pital Jan. 29, has shown grad ual but steady improvement in the past week. y.: . MacArthur will undergo surgery to correct his prostate condition when further lab oratory tests show he has overcome the infection and kidney involvement caused by the urinary block. (nssy? Stop Heart Gas 3 Times Faster Certified laboratory tests prow BELL-ANS tab lets nitralize3 times as modi stomach acidity in one minote as many leading digestive tablets. Get BELL-ANS today for the fastest known relief. 35 at druggists. Send postal to BELL ANS, Orangeburg, N. V. for literal fret saapla. FBI's Relentless Pursuit Keeps 10 Most Wanted Fugitives 'Very Nervous' Washington (UPD - Some where in America today are 10 men who have good reas on to be very, very nervous. They are the "10 most wanted fugitives" huiited re lentlessly by the FBI. Sooner or later they find there is no place to hide. One of them has been on the run for nine years. He is Frederick J. Tenuto who has been on the FBI list since May 24, 1950. Tenuto, 44, staged a spectacular break from Holmesburg Peniten tiary, Pa., while serving a term for murder. Also a long time on the loose is James Eddie Diggs, who made the FBI's big 10 list on Aug. 27, 1952. Diggs, a 46-year-old Negro, fled the 4-H Club News Clothing and Cooking The Antelope 4-H Clothing and Cooking club met recent ly at Donna Geren's house. The club is going to have a Valentine party instead of a Christmas party last Decem ber. The members' mothers are invited to attend and there will be a planned lunch eon. Each person coming is to take a gift for the valen tine exchange. Assignments were given and reports were made on each girl's project. Roll call for the next meet ing will be about a favorite vegetable and how it's fixed. The Senior Bread girls: Jo Anna' Mallory, Alice Wool folk, Georgia Hubbard and Karen Jossy, are going to give a demonstration on the variations of sweet rolls. While the lunch was being prepared, songs were led by Lola Ackerman. Alice Woolfolk and Karen Jossy gave worthwhile point ers in their demonstration, "How to Fit a Pattern." Since members wanted to know the right way to press, Mrs. Don Anderson and Mrs. E. A. Mallory promised to give a very complete demon stration on pressing March 5. The next meeting, a Valen tine party, is set for Feb. 13 at Karen Jossy's home. . ' Judy Hill, Reporter Daffy Dills The sixth meeting of the Daffy Dills was held at Judy Frink's home . Saturday, Feb. 6. , First the group played a game brought by James An horn. Carolyn Sidener was the winner. Business meeting was conducted by President Judy Frink. Roll call was an swered by describing a hy brid tea rose. The leader told about a new program for members. Some pictures were taken of the group: The meeting was ad journed. Susan Vincent was a new member. , Refreshments were served by Judy Frink. James Anhorn, Reporter Shady Cove-Group leaders and girls interested in 4-H work held a meeting Wednes day at the Shady Cove school for the purpose of organizing a 4-H club in the area. The three projects to . be taken this year are cooking, sewing and flower arranging. Leaders for the projects will be Mrs. William Shepherd, flower arrangement; Mrs. Ivan Hale, cooking; and Mrs. Cecil Kee, sewing. - Dates have been set for the three groups to meet with their respective leaders. Alert To Continue Journey to Islands Coos Bay - (UPD - The 100 foot ship Alert will leave here Tuesday on another leg of its voyage to the Galapagos is lands off the coast of South America. But this time only men will be aboard. Don Harrsch, Seattle, skip per of the ship, said Sunday only 13 men will be aboard the Alert when it leaves here. The three women and four children who were on the ship when it docked here last Tuesday.: are being sent over land to San Diego, Calif. The Alert was battered in heavy "seas for 36 hours last week before putting in here with '- the help of -the Coast Guard Tuesday. ' Harrsch. said all repairs have been made and the ship is ready to continue its jour ney. Medford Student On University List Jeffry P. Barnes, Medford, is .one of the University of Minnesota students in the col lege of science, literature and arts, to receive a better than B average for the fall quarter at the university in Minneapo lis. Students to be eligible for this list must have at least a 3.5 grade average for the one quarter. law after being charged with the murder of his wife and two sons. Evasion Exception But the ability of Tenuto and Diggs to evade J. Edgar Hoover's G-men is the ex ception rather than the rule. The FBI set up the "most wanted" roster on March 14, 1950. In the past nine years, 124 men have been on the list and 114 of them have been scratched off by arrest, death or in one case dismissial of the warrant against them. Most of the wanted men have been caught as a result of nation-wide publicity in newspapers, magazines, on radio and TV and from hav ing their FBI mug shots on post office walls. For many of the runaway criminals, capture is a relief. Nabbed in Seattle, Wash., on May 10, 1954, Alex Whit more told FBI agents, "I was shaky. I was looking over my shoulder all the time. I was scared. I knew you would get me." John Raleigh Cooke, want ed for armed robbery, had ex pected the law to close in. When trapped in Detroit on Oct. 20, 1953, he said: "It's a relief to be caught. I knew it was coming, but I didn't know when." Must Pay Piper Some are philosophical. Joseph Levy, one of the most successful men ever investi gated by the FBI, "took his capture with resignation. Nailed at Churchill Downs race track at Louisville, Ky., on April 30, 1953, he said: "When you dance, you have to pay the piper and this is the end of the road for me." Not many of the fugitives give up the hare and hound game voluntarily however, Carmine DiBiase turned him self in to the FBI on Aug. 28, 1958. He said he realized that running away would solve nothing. "I'm glad it is over," he was quoted as saying. "I had to come in." Others may feel that way, too, but they keep running anyway. None of the criminals who were on the original "most wanted" list are on it any more. The last man removed from the original roster was Henry Randolph Mitchell. A federal warrant against Mitch ell was dismissed on Aug. 28, 1958. Sixteen of the top 10 alum- A Too Late To Classify FOR KENT Small 2-bdrm. house. $50. 2566 Howard. Call SP 2-2793 for lruormatlon. FOR SALE AKAI Stereo tape re corder victor radio & Stereo phonograph comb. $110 & 50 long play records. Canon 8 MM Zoom with case $125. Call NO 4-:. 948. LOST Pet skunk. 221S Ruhl Way. SP 3-1758. FOR RENT 2-bdrm. house, fenced yard. SP 3-4031. WANTED TO RENT Pasture for 1 horse. Oak Grove school district. By 4-H girl. SP 3-4834. FOR RENT 1-bdrm. duplex. Furn. complete with auto washer. Ph. SP 3-3074. WOULD LIKE TO BUY Rock saw or rock cutting equipment. Cheap. SP 2-8521. FOR SALE 2-bdrm. house. Good condition. Furn. or unfurn. Ph. SP 3-4426. FOR SALE 8 wks. old male Bea gle. S15. SP 3-5601. FOR RENT 1-bdrm. unfurn. house, garage. 408 Park Ave. SP 2-4152. FOR SALE Skill model 5.4 jig saw. Never used. S32.50. NO 4-2956. CHINA CLOSET, curved glass front & sides. Excellent condition. $100. Misc. antiques. SP 2-8419. FOR RENT Nice unfurn. 1-bdrm. duplex. SP 2-9320. FOR SALE Large burro. Very gentle. SP 3-1324. FOR RENT Furn. house. West Side, close in. garage. SP2-U537. FOR RENT Large 3-bdrm. house. Central Point school. NO 4-1325. LAUNDRY? WET CLOTHES? Dry your clothes in our big gas tum blers. 10c for 10 min. Wash, , rinse & spin 20c. BEA'S W5ST INGHOUSE LAUNDROMA1, 234 Crater Lake. WANTED TO BUY Property or cabin Lake O the Woods area. Write 514 N.W. Man zanita Ave., Grants Pass, Ore. WILL the lady on Oakdale who lost her wallet at OSC rummage sale Thurs. morning contact Mrs. Cou ey. SP 3-5433 or SP 2-8096. 4x8 x'i V-grooved Mahogany pre finish S3.52 per sheet. 4x8x? Texture 111 Mahogany exterior $160 per M. 1x6 No. 4 Sheathing $35 per M. NORTON LUMBER CO. Phoenix Camp White Ashland S PEC I A L 2 used 36"x54" windows with frames, $10 ea. 5 used 48"x45" picture windows $8 ea. 2 used 54"x40" picture windows $8 ea. 1 used 60"x48" picture window $15. Complete line Westinghouse small appliances at wholesale prices. HAGGARD LUMBER CO. On Hwy. 99 KE 5-2522 PHOENIX COLOR prints any make slide. - Anscochrome dev. in mounts. Phillips, 703 Beatty. SP 2-9318. CHIP BOARD UNDERLAYMENT - ," 4x8 $3.05 sheet LEWIS ' WHOLESALE BUILDERS SUPPLY 443 S. Riverside SP 2-7135 LAUNDRY, LAUNDRY, LAUNDRY Wash 20c, dry 10c Parking area, open 24 hrs. BEA'S WESTINGHOUSE LAUN DROMAT 634 Crater Lake Ave. "OIL TO BURN" MOBILHEAT S&H Green Stamps, too. MEDFORD FUEL CO Call SP 2-2111 HEATHKIT From " your authorized factory representative. Southern Ore Northern Calif. VERL G. WALKER CO. 205 W. Jackson SP 3-7557 Medford. Oregon BLOX BLOlC BLOX 2-foot and under Big double or single loads S&H green stamps MEDFORD FUEL Tel SP 2-2111 BUNDLES OF OLD NEWSPAPERS for sale ' 20c each. Mail Tribune Office. 33 N. Fir. ni are dead. Henry Clay Tol lett, Fred William Bowerman and Lloyd Reed Russell were all slain in gun battles with law enforcement officers. Died In Chair Gerhard Arthur Puff and William Merle Martin were executed following convic tions for murdering police of ficers. Sterling Groom died in the electric chair following his conviction for a vicious murder in Virginia. Otto Aus tin Loel was executed fol lowing a murder conviction. Skeletal remains found on a farm near Elsworth, Kan. on Sept. 7, 1959, were identi fied by FBI experts to be those of Frederick Grant Dunn. In addition, Meyer Dembin and Anthony Brancato died in gangland assassinations. George William Krendick was taken off the list after a sui cide. Glen Roy Wright, Thom as J. Holder and Charles E. Johnson died natural deaths. Jack Harvey Raymond com mitted suicide while in pris on. Frederick Emerson Peters, master impersonator with more than one hundred alias es, died shortly after being found unconscious in a New Haven, Conn., hotel where he had registered-under an assumed name. There is no such thing as a "criminal type," according to the FBI, but the most wanted fugitives do have some characteristics in com mon. For one thing, a fugitive always tries to put as much mileage as possible between himself and the scene of the crime. The 112 fugitives rounded up to date have been arrested an average of 911 miles from the scene of the crime for which they are sought. Some Traced Sooner The hunted men have been picked up on the average of 182 days after being placed on the list. But some are trac CANADA DRY 'THANK YOU" OFFER NEW LIMY CARDIGAN FOR YOl; Choice of 4 Spring Colors with Personal Initial 5.95 Value for Only S2.50 -:;?-:-xm'y C aJS. " : faMt" a- : There's nothing an American l o woman admires more quality and value. lour endorse- quality and value. lour endorse- -jjv Dottle ment of delicious, nutritious ;x able in Canada Dry. beverages proves it over and over again. So we'd like to show our appreciation in a personal way, with this , special offer. 9 A: luxuriously soft, classically styled cardigan sweater ... the same as the models are wearing a $5.95 value can TO ORDER YOUR SWEATER, PICK UP A CANADA DRY ORDER HANK AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE ed a lot sooner than that, i Joseph James Brletic, who fled Clayton, Mo., to avoid prosecution for robbery was arrested 1,600 miles away at Lancaster, Calif... on Feb. 10, 1953-the day after he made the "10 most wanted." The FBI says the fugitives, on the list have averaged ' 5'9" in height, 158 pounds j in weight and an age of 43. Their popular pastimes are gambling, drinking and play ing the horses. They like to read detective magazines, crossword puzzle books and western fiction. Some have even tried their hand at writ ing articles and short stories. In addition to Tenuto and Diggs, the FBI currently list ed the folowing eight other fugitives for top priority cap ture: David Daniel Keegan, Eu gene Francis Newman, An gelo Luigi Pero, Edwin San ford Garrison, Billy Owens Williams. Robert Garfield -HEATRE INFORMATION SERVICE CALL SPring 3-7323 FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATRES FOR El RITA HAYWORTH ANTHONY FRANCIOS A GIG YOUNG la CinemaScopE be . than l uuiue It comes in I CI I I i) I Vi I i wmi iiuw r : i tv MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. 7 Monday, Fib. . 1960 1 Brown. Smith Gerald Hudson and Kenneth Rap Lawson. CHARCOAL STEAKS TILL MIDNIGHT CANDLE ROOM HOTEL Medford V t -ft Open Daily 5:30 P.M. to Midnight Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M. NOW SHOWING the 4s - U It y What ATV, was Frf A alibi W I that STKVCJ PAGE HE mbHUGH MIFflTH lANFOtD MEtSNEt yours, with your personal ilk initial fnr inst 9 C.amtAa Tnr 1 an m i ;i caps pius ?.ju. Avail- caps plus ?z.oU. (Avail- ladies' and children's sizes.) lovely colors: white, blue. scarlet, black and it's finished with soft toned buttons, finest detailing. Made of 100 DuPont Orion, the best high-bulk quality, it launders like a hanky .:. . is packaged in a - protective ; polyethylene bag. A wonderful asset to your wardrobe!