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Show '14 SUNDAY HERALD Sunday, .April 16, 1950 Bank Robber Put On List Of FBI's flO Most Wanted Yeggs' WASHINGTON, April 15KU.R) An oldume ' catue rustier wno tiirnMl hn n lr rnhhpr has ioined the ranks of! the FBI's "10 most wanted fugitives. He is Henry Clay Tollett who tranMl Novi 22. 1949. from the McNeil Island, Wash., federal in a irucs penitentiary by hiding mainland. to the furniture taking Toilett replaces Lee er Emory Downs, west coast and armed robber; who was captured April 7 at Dayjona Beach, by FBI agents. Downs is Fla, one of three "10 most wanted i safe-crack- Judge's Daughter Dies After Fall From High Bridge WASHINGTON. April 15 W.R) Anne Edgerton, Henry W. daughter of JudgeU. S. court of the of Edgerton appeals, died Friday night, some 13 hours after she plunged 85 feet from a capital bridge. Miss Edgerton was seen climbing over a bridge railing on Massachusetts avenue early Friday. She landed near a parkway be- neath 'the span, "suffering multiple fractures and internal in- Juries. . Miss Edgerton's "parents were too shocked to discuss the tragld edy. Coroner A. toMagruder conduct an planned autopsy later.! Police said all marks of identification had been removed from the girl's clothing. She was first identified several hours after her fall by Dr. Stanley Olinick, a psychiatrist who has been treat. ( Mac-dona- : ing her. For the past year, Miss Edgerton had been employed as a for the national labor relations board. Her superiors said she was selected only this week for advancement. Judge Edgerton is a native of Bush Center, Kans. He was appointed to the appeals court here in 1938. .seno-graph- er i 1 CTVTL ENGINEER ,. CHIEF COMING ; SALT LAKE CITY, April. 15 (U.R) The president of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Ernest E. Howard of Kansas City, will be a Utah visitor next week. . Howard will arrive Monday morning for an address that night .to the intermountain section of the Civil Engineers Society. President of the section is George P. Smith of Bountiful. World's dryest spot is a desert ef 300,000 square miles in Chines Turkestan, i- IfuESNEL, B. C, April 15 (U.PJ M young logger accused of a girl glared at jailers Saturday and refused to Salk of his wild adventure climated bv a night-lon- g seige of buyets and tear gas. ert Legace, 19 - year - old French Canadian, was charged abduction and breaking into wi'i a fibin where he was cornered He appear-ecrJeo- re fbta time by police. Harold Rox magistrate la$f night and was remanded to until a hearing April 22. custody blonde-haired he girl, - who refused to identify, was poce ta&n to a hospital. She suffered a pight leg wound as she held a ffifle and protected the man accused of abducting her. Authorities would not permit reporters to talk to her. ab-duijt- ing fugitives captured, since the FBI gave its original list to the United Press on Feb, 6. "Tollett is considered armed and dangerous," the FBI said. The Arkansan, the FBI was informed, ?will not be taken peacefully but will almost certainly shoot it out in the . 55-year- street." He was serving a at McNeil for the $100,000; rob beries of the Sweet Home bank. Sweet Home. Orei and the bank : ing house of E. Gj. Young & Co., Oakland,! Ore., in 1947. artist Tollett is a make-u- p Though his hair normally is gray, he may nave dyed it black. He weighs about 200 pounds He is five feet 8 inches tall. He has brown eyes, and a faint scar below the outer corner of the on left right eye. He- has tattoos Goldie - Clay" a calf "Henry black cat and "13." He walks with a slouch. Tollett is a heavy drinker, and was arrested first in April, 1923, for rustling cattle in Oklahoma. He got a two-ye- ar prison term. Later he served terms for robbery and auto theft. Tollett. was picked up again in January, 1932, for bank robberiesin Oklahoma City and Holdenville, Okla and in March of that year got 30 years for armed rob bery. He was released from tnis term April 16, 1948. Tnen ne shifted to the west coast and more bank robberies. - TO MOVE OUT CHEYENNE. Wyot, April Show Goes On For Fonda In Llgger Held On Adduction Charge RE AD 15 Eectric Hazards Stressed at Meet of Wife's Tragic Death Spite Very sorry, but this is NEW YORK. April 15 (UJ?) The show went on today for actor Henry Fonda in spite of the suicide of his estranged socialite wife the second tragedy in the lives oi those connected with the Broadway hit "Mr. Roberts." Fonda lived up to his as the stage and screen's most reliable star by appearing in the title role of the play last night less than 12 hours after the death of Mrs. Frances Seymour Brokaw Fonda, 42, who apparently killed herself because of the actor's romance with a younger woman. Mrs. Fonda slashed her throat with a razor yesterday morning at Craig sanitorium in Beacon, N. Y.,: where she had been undergoing treatment. She was reported to have been depressed by Fonda's plans to divorce her and marry beautiful Susan Blan-char- d, . step-daugh- old attended funeral rites at a Beacon funeral chapel Friday afternoon but were not present for ter SALT LAKE CITY, April 15 A 3p to 35 per cent increase in Utah sugar beet acreage is anticipated this year. General Agricultural Superintendent pion Tolman, of Utah-IdaSUgar company, also said that he looks for mechanized harvesting to be used more and more. although the machines face ob stacles during spring work. Utah-Idah- o last year contracted for 14,01$ acres, with most of the acreage in Salt Lake, Utah and Sevier counties. About 13,700 acres were planted. Attorney! George Brokaw in 1936 and they were considered one of the happiest couples in the Broadway-Hollywood social set until they separated .last fall. Fonda announced last December that a divorce (was "in the process of Mrs. Fonda being arranged." entered the sanitorium Feb. 3 for treatment of a nervous breakdown. (U.R) ho o er -- ASTORIA, Ore., April 15 U.R Astoria's creeping Coxcomb hill will slip four and one-ha- lf inches in the next hour, and it will move nine feet In the next 24 hours. Nothing can be done to stop it. In three' months the slithering earth flow! 1,000 feet long and 300 feet wide has caught 21 homes. It threatens 20 other homes as fissures spread in streets, sidewalks, and yards. But that's not all. Saturday, state highway departmentgeologist Lewis Scott said there was a potential slide forming above the city's port docks on the same hill land it would do much more damage when it got started. Scott also predicted that the entire north slope of Astoria would be Involved in sliding actioneven though it might take 500 yearsJ About 50 per cent of this city's 18,000 residents have homes on; the north slope. Scott said two dozen homes - iPBOVO 0 LUIYUMIUIL 8 nj en Courtney Bennett. The Fonda and his wife's! mother, Mrs. Eugene Ford Seymour of Greenwich, Conn., blue-blood- ed The federal-stat- e agriculture statistician Saturday reported that .ranchers in Wyoming's drouth-strickrange lands planned to either sell out or move their herds. George Knutson said the lack of moisture, plus ithe grasshopper infestation last year reduced grazing lands in northeastern counties to a parched condition. He said recent snow storms and rains might delay the liquidating and moving plans, but added that serious consequences are bound The American flag of 15. stars to follow unless much additional 15 stripes was in official use precipitation falls.' fS 23 years, from 1795 to 1818. (U.R) best way out," she wrote in a note addressed to her physician, Dr. the cremation which followed. The Fondas had two children. Jane Seymour, 12, and Peter Henry,, 9. Mrs. Fonda had another child by an earlier marriage.! Mrs. Fonda's suicide was the second tragedy to stalk the principals of "Mr. Roberts." Thomas O. Heggen, Jr., the author, was feund dead in a bathtub in his Manhattan apartment last May, an empty bottle of sleeping pills nearby. His death was listed as accidental, but friends said he had been depressed and was taking- sleeping pills regularly. of producer Oscar Hammerstein. Fonda married the fabulously II. wealthy widow of $ALT LAKE CITY, April 15 electriThe home-grow- n cian "who "engineers" with friction tape and a screwdriver is onfc of the nation's worst hazards a safety viewpoint. of the he secretary-treasurInternational Association of Electrical Inspectors, Charles L. Sitfith, also warned laymen "not to think they know everything alybut electrical appliances in the heme." Je spoke Friday at the associD i vision ate's Northwestern meeting in Salt Lake City. An increased number of appliances Ing the home, he said, has increased the potential hazard of trfjise who are not experts "play-iraround with electricity.? i5mith used as an example television sets. They carry high voltage, he said, and can be deadly tries to repair or ina dequate stil one ofwithout the operation. knowledge ijpther speakers included the president of the Northwest Division, D. J. Wolfers, Salt Lake Q$y, Dr. William inD. Stratford of Weber College Ogden and Mlyor Earl J. Glade. frn . Creeping Hill Takes Out 21 Astoria Homes; 20 More Due Higher Acreage For Sugar Beets the Slated This Year LUXURY AT A LOW COST Jraiif irap d Pne Width Wide - DURABILITY There Is No Equal! IT COSTS LESS THAN YOU THINK! Modernize Your Kitchen Drainboards, Bathroom, Fireplace and Window Sills, Etc. Free Estimates ' G. Myrl Tibbirrs Tile! , Provo Contractor Phone 073-J- 1 i. ' READY MADE GENUINE TILE BEAUTY STOil 2 - a-- and apartment houses would be threatened in the ', threatening commercial district earth flow.' He oaid he was drawing up a master plan for the city officials that would recommend tapping water from the hill to delay a new slide. residents of the Meanwhile, Irving avenue district know what it's like to have their property caught in the path of geological , progress. One resident put his expensive house up for sale to the first cash buyer with $4,000 the same day he lost 12 feet of his back Mrs. resident, yard. 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