Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY,JULY 27, 1950.
AP Newsfeatures
NEW YORK.—To wrest from a
slacier some of the climatic se=
rets of thousands of years, Wil
iam O. Field, jr., of the American
Geographical Society has returned
once more to Alaska,
Field, head of the AGS depart
ment of exploration and field re
cearch, will visit the 15-man team
operating from the glaciological
aboratories set up June 22 near
‘he center of a 700-square mile ex
hanse of snow and ice near Juneau
in Southeastern Alaska.
The project is sponsored by
saderal agencies, including the U,
3, Forgst Service and U, S. Geo
ogical Survey, and its findings
ill be rrade available to the gov
.nment. Representatives of sev=
.ral U. &. agencies are visiting the
yroject this summer,
Now in its second year, the pro
oct seeke also new information on
the physical properties of ice and
he climate controls affecting gla
cier expansion and recession.
The party is measuring the
<nowfall which forms the glacier
in its upper levels, the flow of ice
ta lower levels and its final dis
ippearance by melting. It drills
saveral hundred feet to study the
rystal structure of the ice deep in
the glacier. Surveyors are map
ping the whole region, and other
scientiste are studying vegetation
near the ice to determine past va
rviations.of glaciers.
One syecific glacier (the Taku)
is advancing several hundred feet
a year and toppling trees 150 years
old in iis path,
“The Juneau ice field is one of
B wost accessible extensive gla
ez s¥stems in the world,” Field
commented,
™he trend toward growing more
prass is just beginning to spread
yeross the counfry. Yet nearly 200
vears ago George Washington
wrote: *“My countrymen have too
little knowledge of the profits of
grassland.”
Boa constrictors are often vie=
sus when captured but soon be
come rather docile.
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Renewed & Cuaranteed
By
“‘Athens’ Oldest Dealer”
1949 MERCURY 4 DOOR SE
lDAN—Original light gray
finish, excellent W. S. W,
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1949 YORD TUDOR SEDAN—
Original light gray finish,
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clean inside and out,
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| 1947 MERCURY CLUB COUPE
i —Original’ biege finish,
| extra good rubber, new
| reat covers, heater, clock,
j motor in good condition—
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\ 1946 FORD STATIONWAGON
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1946 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR
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<l, plastio seat covers, and
motor runs 0, K.—
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1949 TYORD PICK-UP TRUCK
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ffiean inside and out—on
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194¢ CHEVRCLET 115 TON
All metal body truck—
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otor fa good condition—
: $595.00
39 other Used Cars and
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Cradit and Terms
handied I our offices.
. A. TRUSSELL
“Established 1918”
Tieint ng Broat Phone 1097
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THATCH SHOULD FOOL 'EM—Rice straw is used to camouflage a U. S. Army truck in South
Korea, Machine gun and two-man crew also use straw to hide them from North Korean planes. ,
“SLICK WILLIE™ MAY BE
PUBLIC ENEMY NUMBER ONE
(EDITOR’S NOTE: The 1956
brand of outlaw is no longer the
big-time mobster. But he is just
as much of a public enemy.
Here’s the second of two dis
patches that describe the men
most wanted right now by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The FBI appeals to all U. S. cit
izens for help in capturing these
enemies to society, But every
one on the list is dangerous. If
you spot one of them, or have
any information that would help,
don’'t try to be a hero; get in
touch with the FBI or your local
police immediately.)
BY DOU(}LAS LARSEN
-~ NEA Staff" Correspondent
WASHINGTON.—(NEA)—Mur
der, prisen breaks, and auick trig
ger fingers are the lawless habits
that have put half a dozen crim
inals on the FBl's list of Anveri
ca’s 10 “most wanted mon »
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WiLLIAM SUTTON: Tidy gar
dens and slick acting,
Bank robbers make up almoss
half the list. Less iolent than
most but with a Trecord that
eclipses the others for cunning is
a man known variously as “Slick
Willie” and “Willie the Actor.”
These nicknames belong to WIL
LIAM FRANCIS SUTTON, who
comes as close to being Public
Enemy No. 1 as anybody on the
FBUIs list.
Sutton is one of three robbers
who walked off with $63,942 in a
daylight holdup of a Manufactur
ers Trust Co., branch in New York
on March 9, 1950. The technique
they followed made police think
it was a “Slick Willie” job; they
were sure of it when they reached
his room and found detailed notes
on the bank layout. Few capers
were ever “cased” as well as this
one.
Phobia
But “Willie the Actor,” who has
a phobia for the wave in his hair,
is still at large. One reason may
be his penchant for disguise —
for dyeing his hair, growing mus
taches and then shaving them off,
and for posing as a respectable cit-
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HENRY TOLLET: Escape in a
desk, a gun in the sleeve,
izen who keeps busy gardening
and tidying up the back yard.
His jail career began ‘wlth_ a
10year burglary. stretch in Sing
Sing, on which he won parole.
Since then he has been in many
prisons—and “out of them by his
, h ]‘\ w g
BN, drinks with
Dixie Crystals
Pure Cone Svgar e
own estape methods. Once he
modeled a plaster of aris head
that was such a good self-portrait
the guard thought he was in bed;
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FREDERICK TENUTO: A quiet
manner, beer-money hold-ups.
meantime, Willie was fleeing.
In various bank holdups, he has
posed as a telegraph messenger,
a mail carrier, and even as a po
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THOMAS KLING: Lots of tat
toos and a bar-stool scar.
lice officer. But despite his ability
to merge with neighborhood life
as a householder, the FBI consid~
eds he would be an extremely dan«
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MORLEY KING: Three langua
ges and a body in the trunk.
gerous man when cornered. ?
Make-Up Artist "
Less notorious but also a make
up artist is Henry Tollett, a hefty,
56-year-old convicted bank rob
ber who escaped from McNeil Is
land, Wash., on Nov. 22, 1949.
Tollet rode out of the prison
yard in a truckload of furniture
that had been refinished in prison
shops. He had crawled under the
tarpaulin and hidden in the well
of a desk, and then jumped off in
Tacoma when the truck stopped
for a M4ght.
When he fled, Tollet was serv
ing a 25-year term for his part in
1947 robberies at a bank in Sweet
Home, Ore., and a business firm
in Oakland, Ore., in which the loot ‘
totalled SIOO,OOO. Listed as ex
tremely dangerous, he carries a
gun in a special pocket inside his{
" THE' BANNER-HERALD, h@n&ijfl)fihl )| Eeat.
left sleeves.
Long Career
A career that began at 11 as a
chronic runaway and then ranged
from burglary to second-degree
murder and jailbreak put Fred
erick J. Tenuto on the FBI “most,
‘wanted list”” Hhis first major
A Pledge to the American Peopl
‘ # ® o ;
The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company
We will resist all unwarranted price rises with all our might. |
i We will make every effort to hold our inventories at the lowest point con
sistent with good service to our customers, because hoarding, whether by whole
salers, retailers or consumers, will cause higher prices. F ot
We will continue to maintain the lowest profit rate generally prevailing in
‘the entire retail industry. Our net profit now is less than one cent on each dollar
of sales. : |
We will continue to strive for more efficient distribution. |
" We will fight waste of food, or time, or money all along the line so as to
narrow the spread between wholesale and retail prices. » o
We will devote all our energies to giving you the most good food for your i
money every day of the week. -8
\ We will strive always to do what is honest, fair, sincere and in the best
interest of our country and our customers. . ’ . 8
As most of you know, this company and the low cost, low profit policies
that built it are under attack. - 4
We are defending ourselves against a suit brought by the anti-trust . :
: lawyers to put A&P out of business.
But the greater conflict in which our country is now engaged takes prece- j
dence over all else. .
Today, with our boys fighting in Korea, we believe that all citizens and 0
all businesses, big and little, should devote themselves wholeheartedly to
the public interest.
' We promise the American people that we will cooperate unhesitatingly : >
; with our nationai government in the present crisis.
. We promise you that we will econtinue to do everything in our power to "3
put more buying power in your food dollar and more gooa food on your . .
dinner table. 2
Q :
N
\ : . Jolim . Wairioel; Ehabrnah
crime was a burglary after he‘;-
caped from the sixth grade of a re=
formatory; he has been in—or a
fugitive from — various state ine
stitutions ever since,
A black-haired, stocy man,
Tenuto has a quiet manner but
commits crimes on the spur of
the moment.- He’s beer. known to
stage a holdup for beer money.
In 1940 asked Tenuto to help de
fend him against another, a man
named DeCaro. Tenuto spotted De-
Caro and his father on the street,
and killed DeCaro’s father.
He got 20 years for that. Later
sentences totaling from 12 1-2 to
25 years were piled on top for as
sault and rvobbery and prison
break, to begin at the end of the
murder term. Tut Tenuto escaped
‘again, fleeing Philadelphia County
Prison in February, 1947, He's
still a fugitive.
* ® @
One vicious crime put Morey
Vernon King on the FBl's list ot
“top 10.” In July, 1947, the body
of his wife, Helen, was found in
a trunk under the porch of a San
Louis Obispo, Calif.,, hotel. King
had disappeare dfrom his hotel
job the day before. Investigation
showed he had kept the body of
his strangled wife in his room for
six days.
King, a native of West Virginia,
is an accomplished chef and lived
in Morocco for many years. He
left California in a car which was
recovered about a year later in
Montana. A dangerous man, he
carries a gun, walks with a limp,
speaks Spanish, French and Ital
ian. The FBI thinks he is trying
’uto hide under an alias. He has
‘unsd them before—such names as
‘Stanislaus E. Ludwig, Alfred Ed
win Morgan, and Nathanial Gold
man,
Lesser Crime
Newest name on the list of the
men most wanted by the FBI is
a hardened, dangerous criminal,
Thomas Kling,
Ironically, he’s wanted right
new for one of his lesser crimes,
and one pretty badly botched up
by Kling’s standards. He pulled
an armed stickup at a Bayonne,
N. J. tavenr the morning after
Christmas in 1949, got nervous
and fired a shot, and was bonged
on the head with an iron bar
stool. In the excitement that fol
lowed, he escaped.
Kling has a long record of
breaking and entering, larceniscl,
atrocious assault, and jail break,
climaxed by a $39,433 bank rob
bery. He was on parole when he
tried the tavern holdup. He's 43,
short and slight, and well tattooed.
Of the FBl's “top 10,” he’s
probably one of the most danger
ous. v
OLDEST BOARDER
VANCOUVER —(AP)— Earls
court, a boarding house here, has
lost its star boarder. Bachelor
Paul Marmette—at 92 British Co
lumbia’s oldest railway pensioner
—has moved from the boarding
house after 55 years continuous
residence there, He will be cared
for at a nursing home.
The boa constrictor reaches a
length of 10 to 15 feet.
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£ %l - 5 .
\Z:fe‘ b NS, ;;
The Princess AlyKhan, formerly
Rita Hayworth, motion picture !
aciress and dancer, examines |
leather goods during a sh, ‘ping
tour in Rome, Htaly. .
Dwindling oil fields sometimes
are revived by forcing the oil out
with gas, air or water.
PAGE ELEVEN
PRINCESS
DAMASCUS == (AP) «= It's a
shame to disclose the secret, but
the Duke of Edinb\fih is going
to surprise Elizabeth with presents
of Damascus brocade, carved wood
and inlaid brass when he returns
from Mediterranean sea duty, The
Duke bought the presents when he
came here on a visit when his ship,
the Chequers, was at Lattakieh.
He explained he bought the broe=
cade because the Princess had been
so impressed with brocade pre
sented her as a wedding present by
Iformer President Shukry Quwwat=
y.
When yßu pack for that vaca
tion trip — take along a couple of
tips from the Safety Education
Division of the Georgia State pa
trol. Get plenty of rest stops on
the road. If only one person does
the driving, see that rest stops are
made frequently and don’t try to
cover too much ground,
This amazing formuls has previously been
secured only by prescription because of cor- ‘
tain bottling problems that have now been' 4
solved. FETEX kills fungus gorms on cone |
tact. Get relief now!
‘FET‘Ex_numEs FOOT
4 RINGWORM =
AT YOUR DRUGGIST 3