Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1960)
MONDAY, AUGUST 8, I960 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. ORE. S B By Jimmy Hatlo They'll Do It Every Time SwiFIELD MAMM , AM GETS A BREAK AND IS SIGNED FOR A NEW WESTERN! TV SHOW" f I'M VERV GRATEFUL FOR THIS ,, -f. WONDERFUL CHANCEI'M THE I lh f S LUCKIEST GUV IN "THE ACTING - Tl v I JVv business i'll do mv bestv Mwj ' - . Nr5 .nmiinjiijiiinnlililli III I nil I HI 7 THIS ROLE IS TOO LIMITED .j7tT ti IBM h( FOR MV ABILITVVERy SiL49B? THWARTIN6-I WANT TO DO " VV A PLAV-THESE LEECHES 'Ooccffih """H-,Lare BLEEDING ME WITH TMIS ) IMP. Kin; t..UmSyr"l.t.l. n'"-"-"'. r--j I r'"f Six months LATER, HIS SERIES SLlNGSHOT IS A HIT- NOW LISTEN TO HIM 1HANX AND A TIP OF THE HATLO HAT TO JACK L.MORROW, RD 1 BOX I30, FLEMINGTOrV . N.J. (C I" I mil - i - ' I U I U I " ' ' ' n$ ond drown the heat In the frotty depths of a long, taste-tingling drink. Choote , i r I S f ' ' A lHi ft i uur favorites from soarklina SODAS . . . tanay FRUIT JUICES ... and mellow X V i I I ' i lTAVM BEERS. They're all IOW PRICED to make them the BEST BUYS in BEVERAGESI W . "? ' S I xi l...k:- .. I.. .. 1m nlrlnwntiu ku rtntlcinn UB of YOUR ' I I Revised Southwest Oregon School Boundaries Approved Salem - IUPD - The Stale Board of Education has order ed new hearings on the pro posed Central Oregon Area Education District and ap proved revised bound a r i c s establishing a similar district in Southwest Oregon. The Central Oregon district as proposed would include Deschutes, J c f f c r son and Crook counties. The board heard testimony from citizens in Jefferson and Crook coun ties strongly opposing t h e plan. Board member Ronald Jones, Salem, made the mo tion to continue hearings and the vole was unanimous. He f ft ' v '. .wfV ;&J BEAUTY TURNED BANDIT Beauty queen turned bandit is the theme of an upcoming movie. It follows the pattern of the life of Dixie Anne Dikes, shown at left after she was crowned Miss Colorado Jaycee of 1958. At right, she is shown when she was arrested on May 13, 1!)59, for the $131 robbery of a suburban drug store in Littleton, Colo, (UP1 Tclephoto) Ex-Beauty Queen Turned Bandit To Be Theme of Movie Canon City, Colo. -IUNI- A beauty queen turned bandit - that's the theme of an up coming movie titled "The Girl, the Gun." . . The subject is a tall, 22-year-old brunette serving time for robbery in Colorado Slate Penitentiary here. . Two years ago, Dixie Anne Dikes was crowned Miss Col orado Jaycee of 1058. She reigned over the Junior Chamber of Commerce cele bration at Centennial Race Track near Denver. Ten months later, she was arrested for the $131 robbery of a suburban drug store. She has been in jail ever since. Gailbreath Studios has ob tained movie rights to her story - a Cinderella tale in reverse. Harold Robbins, fa mous for his "Never Love a Stranger," will direct the film. Dixie has been on police records for some time. She was arrested on assault charg es in her home town of Pueb lo, Colo., as a teenager, and was listed as a runaway in 1957. But this didn't slop her from blazing the beauty con test trail. She was runner-up in the Miss Pueblo competi tion the same year she won the Jaycee title. She returned to Pueblo in Novereber, 1958, but couldn't stay out of trouble. She got into a fight with three police men in a tavern once during the fall. Back in Denver the next spring, Dixie needed money "to get a new slart," an offi cer quoted her. Friends have said she was so poor she had to trade empty pop bottles for her groceries. She staged two stickups in two days, using the same tech nique both times. .' Her method was to stand on a corner looking beautiful, . until some man picked her up. Then she'd ask him io stop and wait for her while she went in, once to a store, the other time to a hold. The in nocent companion thus pro vided a linndy getaway car. Dixie tried it at Denver's Newhouse Hotel and got $17 from the desk clerk. Then she tried it lit the Aurora Pharmacy, but the druggist pursued her and shot at the ear five times. Dixie was cap tured in an alley a block-and-a-half from the store a few minutes Inter. T h e hot - tempered girl knocked down a newspaper photographer who tried to take her picture at police headquarters later in the day. By that time, Dixie had married William Gottfried. She said the wedding was in September, 1958, but he claims it was in 1957, before her beauty contest victory. Gottfried is serving a term In the Illinois Slate Prison for the Criminally Insane for kid naping a policeman. He told the warden there he was "hopped up on dope when he married Dixie and did it "more or less on a dare from my friends." No Firfng Pin Dixie had a .32 caliber pis tol with her in the Aurora holdup, but it had no firing pin so tlu charge against her was reduced from aggravated to simple robbery. She was sentenced to the Colorado State Reformatory for an Indeterminate term in July, 1959. Since the reforma. tory has no women's quarters she was held at Denver Coun ty Jail. Last December the parole board transferred her tto the penitentiary "to get her away from less desirable associates at the county jail and to pro vide better rehabilitation facilities." An appeal for parole was turned down in February. said he wants the hearings continued "for a month or so to look at the facts In okaying the Southwest Oregon Area Education Dis trict, the board left out Jose phine county because of op position there and altered other proposed boundaries. As approved, the district would be comprised of all of Coos county, all of the Reeds- port and Gardner school dis tricts in Douglas county, the Florence school district in Lane county and the Port Or- ford-Langlois school district in Curry county. Barring legal opposition, the Southwest Oregon plan will go on the November bal lot and will be voted upon by voters within the proposed district. Election of a five-member board of directors elected at large within the district will also be decided. To Make Decisions The directors will make such decisions as where to physically locate the commun ity college, and how much of a tax levy to assess within the district. The levy will be based on valuation of property within the boundaries. Coos Bay is considered the most likely site for the school, which will be a post high school Institution on the jun ior college level. At the same time the board adopted a statement of policy relating to such districts. It states that "a need exists for post-high school education in all areas of the state, and Oregon citizens will benefit to a greater extent if at least some of this instruction is offered in the territory in which they live." Commuting Type The school is to be consider ed primarily a "commuting type of institution" at initial formation. "Students living ithin approximately 50 miles can be benefited," the board said. The plan eventually could include branch facili ties as needs develop and if commuting is not feasible for citizens in some of the far reaching a.eas of the district. The statement said that llie need for post-high school edu cation "will increase during the immediate years beyond the capacity of the present facilities in Oregon." "The citizens of any terri tory to be included in a pro posed area education district should receive educational benefits that would not other wise be available to them or be nvnilablc at less cost to Ihem than if they were re quired to travel outside the district to secure such educa tion." Annexation Easy The board noted that the 1959 law authorizing creation of the districts makes it "rela tively easy" lo annex ter-i-tory to a district already formed but another section of the law makes it "more diffi cult" for territory within a district to withdraw. The board said that in light of this, it will "rule in favor of deleting territory in the Initial formation of a district if the educational benefits to such a territory do not appear self-evident." to. I ' I 6 Hi H -f t Kiel, Germnny-(WI)-A load of deadly German nerve gas grenades dating trom World War II arrived here Friday for disposal in the Atlantic ocean. The small ship "August Peter" will' dilmp the gren ades at a depth of 1,500 feet The grenades were recovered trom German barges sunk in shallower water in the Baltic sea at the end of the war. Washington - (IIPU -The Senate Armed Services com mittee has asked the Penta gon to provide a full report on the mysterious disappear ance of two employees of the lu.sh-hush National Security agency, it was disclosed Sat urday. Thirst-Stoppers tor Pick up a supply of cooling quenchers at BIG Y's "THIRST AID STATION" . . . and drown the heat In the frosty depths of a long, taste-tingling drink. Choose your favorites from sparkling SODAS . . . tangy FRUIT JUICES ... and mellow BEERS. They're all LOW PRICED to make them the BEST BUYS in BEVERAGESI Keep a refreshing supply on tap in your refrigerator by stocking up at YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD BIG Y "oasis" today! BPh TREE TEA 1 UiV p M 48 BAG BLACK 14-LB. BLACK I . 5-9c - 9C I Ifcll'jl INSTANT fF&fifiSfk f l !.:;.' y uHlMiiH hot priced 4-...J., vMjr'Jj UMiSV H, C-NOT CARBONATED kiUUL MMM" "ns k m SHASTA or NEHI CANNED ffl O 1 1 IT 111! 1111 Mil fiZS BSM mk a 7A il-Jli NESTLES -CHOCOLATE , M F -rJ ' AiiiPr I rbt III W ma. '7, f i xa r . . m ' r BAKE RITE ROCK BOTTOM PRICES SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS GUARANTEED SATISFACTION BETTY BAKER MACARONI SPAGHETTI SHADY GLEN MUSHROOMS 4 oz. cans n DEL MONTE TOMATO SAUCE 6 49c KRAFT PARMESAN GRATED CHEESE 8 oz. can Garden Ripe SHORTENING Can MADERA RIPE OLIVES GIANT OR BROKEN PITTED No. 1 BtCANS Get Your Fill Now Medium Size BUY THE is o LARGE CRISP HEADS $1198 -VVI ONLY LETT Heads 1 w Extra Value Trimmed Lazy Aged CHUCK itSS GROUHD '9 BAII-B-D More Eating Meat for Your Money Mm PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WEDNESDAY, AUG. 10th FRYER: $139 BRADSHAW CREAMED HONEY 10-oz? Cart cm BUMBLE BEE CHUNK STYLE TUNA No. Vi Can 29' CENTENNIAL RED BEANS ( jt Bag 43' CENTENNIAL SMALL WHITE BEANS 2 35' CHUN KING CHOW MEIN NOODLES No Can IV? 29' CHUN KING BEAN SPROUTS No. 303 Cans 00 75 c each 33 8