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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1957)
TEN MEDFORD (OREGOK) MAIL TRIBUNE Los Angeles Area Brush Fire Destroys 15 Homes; Tornadoes Lash Middle West Br UNITED PRESS Tornadoes and thunderstorms stormed across six states in a vio lent Fourth of July weather out burst, killing at least one person and injuring 25 others. A blazing California heat wave touched off the Los An geles area's worst brush fire of the season, destroying some 15 homes in the Deerlake Park Highlands region. Twisters and other wild windstorms killed one youth in Minnesota, and injured 10 per sons in Michigan, 8 in Indiana, 4 in Wisconsin and 3 in Iowa. Tornado in Ohio In addition, a tornado at Bry an, Ohio, caused damages esti mated at $500,000, but no in juries. The Michigan twister ripped the Saxony subdivision east of Brighton, injuring four members of one family when it crumpled their home. Another tornado hit near Rogers City Mich., causing some farm damage. At least two homes were de stroyed and more than 10 houses were damaged in the Michigan glorms. Utility lines were report ed down in sections of Living lon and Oakland counties. Another tornado swept the imall community of Brill, Wis., churning 3 one-half mile path of destruction. At least four per sons were injured and seven homes in the village were dam- aged. On Victim In Midwest The only victim of the storms that raked the Midwest was Thomas Klein. 14. who drown ed when squalls overturned a fishing boat on Island Lake near Duluth, Minn. The tornadic weather began in Iowa during the morning when a twister roared into the com munity of Lake City, injuring one woman seriously, destroy ing four homes and damaging 20 others. At Bryan, Ohio, a twister knocked the clock ofi the town Iran Earthquake Casualties Said 1500 Tehran, Iran (IB Official ang press reports Thursday laid that 1.500 bodies have been re covered so far from the rubble of Tuesday's disactrous earth quake in the Caspian Sea area. Five hundred bodies were re covered in the Babul and Ma zanderan areas alone, the re ports said. More than 6.000 per sons were reported injured. The violent series of quakes devastated sections of northern Iran Tuesday. Early estimates by the head of the National Red Cross placed casualty totals at about 1.000 dead and between 4.000 and 5.000 injured. Firecrackers Blamed For 8 Forest Fires Olympia W Firecrackers were blamed today for eight fires on state-protected forest land. The state Department of Nat ural Resources said the fires, oc curring Wednesday and Thurs day, burned three and seven tenths acres. The department re ported a total of 14 fires burn ing nearly 17 acres during the two-day period. The f irecraqker - caused blazes were reported in the Enumclaw, Montcsano, Chehalis, Kelso and Cathlamet protection districts. Glendale 'Miracle Baby' Now Weighs 19 Pounds Glendale -"IP Jeanne Mar lene Gilbert of Glendale cele brated her first birthday Thurs day, tipping the scales at 19 pounds. One year ago, Jeanne was called one of the tiniest babies ever born in Oregon. She weighed in at less than two pounds at the time. She was known as the "miracle baby" of Oregon. Theyll Do It Every Hen'Ry's needed a desk at home FOR 4 LOHo TIME, SO 4T LAST HIS WIFE SFRUMij"" So HOW MUCH T51 ' vJUATfv PirTV I USE DOES HE 6ET yfV rf TU- iJ ? m JS? S HEH-HEH--HJLF fSgiSfe rlfTl Bee-yoo-t-i-ful. hall, deroofed six stores, de stroyed cars, uprooted trees and downed utility lines. Police Chief Richard Bloier es timated damage at Bryan at $500,000. A tornado also caufed an es timated S50.000 damage when it struck near Bengal and Mari Is That So? At the bo(tom of the world lies a huge continent almost as large as Europe and Australia com bined. It is important today be cause many nations are exploring it during this International Geo physical year, 195.-58. Although less than 1 per cent of its area has been explored by man on foot, we do know that 7-5-5 this is a great land mass not a series of islands as recently be lieved and criss-crossed by mountain ranges. The continent of Antarctica differs fundamentally from the Arctic regions at the other end of the world. Where the Arctic is an ocean, covered with drift ing pack ice and hemmed in by the land masses of North Ameri ca. Europe and Asia, the Ant arctic is a land mass surrounded by the Atlantic, Pacific and In dian Oceans. The ice cap covering the Ant arctic is more than 11,000 feet thick at the center and the cold air cascades off this ice sheet with such force that it makes the nearby seas the stormiest on earth. . While in the Arctic more than 1,000,000 persons live within 2,000 miles of the North Pole, in an area rich in forest and mining industries, within that same distance of the South Pole there is not a single tree, not a single settlement apart from weather observers and members of the Geophysical parties. And probably whalers. Certainly no other place in the world is as cold and during this summer we have, already heard of a temperature of 110 degrees below zero. Previously, lows of 80 below zero have been registered. On Day A Year At the exact South Pole, of course, there is but one direc tion and that north; but one time zone, because all converge. There is but one "day" a year six months of it being day light, six months being darkness. Like the ice sheets of our Northland which retreated and left such relics as the Great Lakes, points out Walter Sulli van in Quest for a Continent (McGraw-Hill, N.Y.), the Ant arctic ice has shrunk, too. It is at least 1,000 feet thinner than it was. Nonetheless, in the hint erland only the loftiest peaks pierce the blue and while crust which still blankets almost the entire continent. Among these peaks are a few live volcanoes how many, no one knows. One erupting vol cano heats one small section so that it is snow-free in a region of eternal snows. As other continents shed wa ter, Antarctica which has no rivers sheds ice. Snow falls on the ice sheet, adding constantly to its bulk, and then the ice flows to the sea, sometimes flow ing distances of more than 1,000 miles. Known As 'Calving Some of these riven of com paratively fast-flowing ice, or glaciers, cut through the plains of more immobile ice. In the steep valleys, the ice "rapids" may thunder with the sound of Time T yT -) SUFvPRlSE, HEMPy.' A $QM-f GOSH'. IT'S V y- r"2 ' F!?0NT SECRET4Ry FOR tVNEH j ; WONDERFUL, - yyt jKYK I wORK HOME.' THE TOP FOR J EFFIE JUST R 5StSk Y0UR BOOKS THE BOTTOM vlR" VHJT T i sSt o!5taL F0R Au- vour files yli I 4LW4YS ) 'i ljlgJ-'K'E ITDE4R? 'I VlZp Friday. JulT H87 etta. Ind., about 35 miles south of Indianapolis. Violent thunderstorms accom panied by high winds also caused extensive damage in Franklin, Edinburg and Columbus, Ind. At least eight persons were injured in Franklin. In the Far West. 100-degree Br IUGENE BURNS Ringtr-Natunliit ! continuous artillery fire, states : Sullivan who has accompanied ! three expeditions to the Ant ! arctic. The great ice sheet does not pour into the sea at certain places only, as do streams of water, but it pushes out in vir tually all directions and Ice bergs break off from the ice front along almost the entire coastline. This process is known as "calving." Where the ice sheet has push ed out over the sea and remains attached, it is known as an ice shelf. One such is the Ross Ice Shelf, roughly the size of France and considerably larger than California. Such "wafers" are often more than 700 feet thick. (Copyright, 1957, by Eugen Burns) (Released by McClure Newspaper Syndicate) Free: By special arrangement with the editors of the Encyclo pedia Americana, my panel of judges will award each week to the reader who. sends me the best true-life adventure, the best nature observation, or the best question on nature and wildlife, a complete 30-volume set of this world-famous reference work in a handsome Sealcraft binding. Each week new submissions will be considered. Sorry, I simply can't answer your many friend' ly letters. Please address your letter to: Is That So! co Med- ford Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sausahto, Calif. Oregon Institutions Get Surplus Foods Salem (IB Federal surplus food commodities valued at S348.365 have been distributed to institutions and camps in Ore gon by the State Department of Finance and Administration dur ing the past 12 months. Finance Director John F Richardson said the food is do nated to Oregon through a direct distribution program .conducted by the U. S. Department of Ag riculture. Richardson said nine state in stitutions received S232.637 of the total amount with the bal ance going to Indian schools, hospitals, missions and old peo ples' homes and summer camps. all of which must serve needy persons in order to qualify. Penal institutions are not el igible. The foods are used in addition to those normally purchased lo cally and are meant only to im prove dietary standards in insti tutions serving needy people, Richardson said. Lakeyiew Man Dies In Nevada Accident Winnemucca, Nev. W Humboldt county 'sheriff's of ficers today reported the death of a Lakeview, Ore., man on a little used highway 27 miles west of Denio near the Oregon border. Killed was Dennis Martin Duffy, an employee of the Lake view hotel. His passenger, Jerry D. O'Sullivan of Snider Creek ranch. Ore., was not injured seriously. Investigating officers said the mishap occurred when the auto went out of control on a sharp curve and plunged through a guard rail into a creek. At the point of the accident, slate route 8-A is not surfaced. By Jimmy Hatlo temperatures racked Southern California. Texas and Oklahoma. Lot Angeles Fire Scores of persons were forced to flee the Los Angeles area brush fire which authorities said already has blackened 4.500 acres in the. Santa Susana Pass area. Firefighters were hampered by the outbreak of other grass fires in the county, many of them believed caused by Fourth of July fireworks. The Midwestern weather vio lence was blamed on the south ward advance of a cool air mass that sent readings tumbling as much as 25 degrees overnight from the lower Great Lakes and the Ohio river to northern Texas and New Mexico. Weathermen predicted scat tered showers and thunder storms today over the Central and Eastern Gulf states, the Ap palachians and the Atlantic Coast states. Elsewhere, week end holiday celebrants will have generally cool, clear weather for out-of-doors activities. Obituaries CHARLES EDWARD GREEN Ashland Funeral services for Charles Edward Green, 60, will be held in Litwiller's Mountain View chapel 'in Ashland at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. The Rev. Wen dell Herbison, First Christian church, Ashland, will officiate. Interment will be in the Moun tain View cemetery. Mr. Green, who lived at 160 Orange St., Ashland, died in a logging accident north of Bly July 3. He was born Feb. 22. 1897, in Colorado, and married Helen Edmunson, March 19, 1929, in Lewiston, Idaho. The couple moved to Klamath Falls in 1930 and to Ashland a year later. Mr. Green worked for Weyerhaeuser Timber company for 26 years. Surviving are his wife, Helen; three children, Donald Green, home on leave from the Navy, Mrs. Eunice Williams, Covela, Calif., and Bonnie Marie. Green, Ashland; three sisters, Mrs. Emma Mikkleson and Mrs. Nel lie Jackson, Portland, and Mrs. Bertha Mikkleson, Ogden, Utah; two brothers, John Green, Port land, and Leonard Green, La Grande; and five grandchildren. CHRISTIAN LOUIS WOLFF Ashland Funeral services for Christian Louis Wolff, 74, of 31 Church St., Ashland, who died at home July 4, will be held in Litwiller's Mountain View chapel at 1:30 p.m. Mon day. Masonic lodge 23 will be in charge. Interment will be in the IOOF cemetery in Medford. Mr. Wolff was born Dec. 8, 1882, in Washington, D. C. He married Margaret Hussong Dec. 7, 1919, in Astoria, and the cou ple moved to Medford in 1920. They moved to Ashland in 1929 where Mr. Wolff operated the Chevron service station on the corner of Main and Church sts. until his retirement in 1953. He was a veteran of World War I, a member of the Masonic lodge, a charter member of Sis kiyou Lodge of Perfection, a member of Hillah Temple, Amer ican Legion Post 14, and Ash land Presbyterian church. Surviving are his wife, Mar garet, and two sons, Louis and Donald Wolfi. all of Ashland. A daughter, Betty Wolff, preceded him in death July 2, 1928, in Medford. ELSIE A. HEAD Funeral services for Mrs. Elsie Alelha Head, 67, who died in Klamath Falls Tuesday, will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in Chapel Mortuary. The Rev. D. E. Millard of Eagle Point will of ficiate. Interment will be in the Central Point IOOF cemetery. Casket bearers will be Doug las McKee, Richard McKee, Maurice Ritchey, Henry Head, Roy Pursel and Harold Head. Mrs. Head, the daughter of D. W. and Mary Burch Beebe, was born in Central Point on April 28, 1890. She was also married in Central Point on June 28, 1911, to Hallie C. Head, who survives. For the past 25 years the family has lived in Klamath Falls. Mrs. Head was a member of the Ladies Auxiliary of Rail road Engineers. Besides her husband, Mrs. Head is survived by one son, Glenn Head. Klamath Falls; one brother, C. R. Beebe of the Medford Realty company; three sisters, Mrs. Hazel Atkins, Eagle Point, Mrs. Eva McKee. Med ford, and Mrs. Faye Ritzinger, Happy Camp. Calif.: and two grandsons. Gary Head and Ron nie Head, both of Klamath Falls. Inspection Station Traffic Declines Cave Junction Southbound traffic through the Redwood highway inspection station aH the state line has decreased from an all time high of 61,855 ve hicles for the first six months of 1956 to 54.156 for the same per iod in 1957. This is the lowest January-to-1 June traffic count in six years, according to Robert Bottel, in spector in charge of the station. ' 'Services Scheduled Saturday Morning For Mrs. Fabrick Funeral services for Mrs. Mar garet S. Fabrick, 83, long time resident of Medford, who died unexpectedly Wednesday, will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at St. Mark's Episcopal church. The Rev. John Bright will officiate. Interment will be in the family plot at Siskiyou Memorial park. Mrs. Fabrick was born in San Francisco April 15, 1874. She moved with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Roberts, to Ore gon when she was three. The family lived in The Dalles and Hood River. She was married to Glen R. Fabrick in Hood River April 15, 1905. He established the Medford Domestic laundry in 1908. They lived at 106 Crater Lake highway for several years, and Mrs. Fabrick, until her death, lived with her son, Glen L. Fabrick, at 358 Highland land drive. Educated in Portland Mrs. Febrick was educated in Portland and Seattle, Wash., where she attended St. Helens academy and the Annie Wright seminary. She was active in civic affairs and fraternal functions, and was a member of the Reames chapter of the Order of Eastern Star; past queen of Zuleima temple, Daughters of the Nile; charter president of the Medford Zonta club, international; the Red Cross, and the Gray Ladies. She was a member of the Episcopal church. She is survived by three daughters. Mrs. Jay A. Sly, Van couver, Wash., Mrs. H. S. Ingle, Ashland, and Mrs. Paul Selby, Medford: two sons. Glen L. Fab rick, Medford, and Dewey A. Reid. stationed with the Navy in Korea: one sister, Mrs. Eliza beth Rand, Alhambra, Calif., and eight grandchildren and four great grandchildren. The family has requested that friends may either send flowers or a donation to the American Heart fund in care of the local postmaster, i Pallbearers will be Chester A. Hubbard. Raymond E. Frisbie, Jack T. Walker, Sam L. Gilbert, Wilbur A. Arnold and Dr. Oscar J. Halbolh. Mrs. Van Sickle's Services Scheduled Funeral services for Mrs. Dor othy G. Van Sickle, 39. of 53 Myers court, Medford, who died yesterday, will be held at Perl Funeral home at 11:45 a.m. Sat urday. The Rev. E. L. Bowers of Eugene will officiate. Services at Siskiyou crematorium will be private. Mrs. Van Sickle was born at Davis, W. Va., May 24, 1918. She was married to Robert L. Van Sickle May 27, 1937, in Bay City, Mich. She attended Brenau col lege for women at Gainsville, Ga., and was a member of the Delta Delta Delta sorority. Van Sickle was elected city councilman from Ward HI in last November's general election. Besides her husband. Mrs. Van Sickle is survived by three chil dren, Barbara Lee Safley, Med ford, Theodore Van Sickle and Robert Van Sickle, both at home; her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Groomes. Medford; one sister, Mrs. A. Curran Mclntyre, Tar zana, Calif., and one brother, Theodore C. Groomes, Medford. Morse Will Testify Against Kuykendall Washington 'IB The Sen ate Commerce Committee an nounced today it will grant the request of Sen. Wayne Morse D-Ore.) to testify next Friday against reappointment of Je rome K. Kuykendall of the Fed eral Power Commission. The group originally had plan ned to complete hearings last week on President Eisenhowers nomination of Kuykendall to a new four-year FCP term. Morse asked Chairman War ren G. Magnuson (D-Wash.) to allow him to appear with an analysis" of what Morse called the FPC chairman's "mislead ing and incomplete" testimony before the committee on June 28. Morse opened the hearing three weeks ago with charges that Kuykendall had led the FCP in a three-year program of favoritism" to private utility interests. Kuykendall's term expired June 22. Roxbury, Conn. KB Mari lyn Monroe and her playwright husband, Arthur Miller, have taken an option on a 100-acre dairy farm near here. Don't Soy "Hello" Say - - - "FILTER-FLO" SPORTS Alice Marble Still Swats Mean Ball By WILLIAM F. TYREE Encino, Calif. (IB The slender, blondish lady with the serious eyes leaned into a fast, low-bounding tennis ball and sent it zipping like a flat streak of light over the net. "I never did hit it so well," beamed 43-year-old Alice Marble, once queen of the world's tennis courts, "The ham in people I guess." The only woman who played like a man to master interna tional competition on the road to Wimbledon still seemed as always to have a supreme ob jective that the ball never bounced twice on her side. She looks as if she'd be ready to match strokes with any of the current players in the world. "They sent me the tickets to Wimbledon again this year," she sighed, "but I couldn't go too busy with other things. And even if I did, I'd only want to sit in the stands as a spectator. Has Proven Herself "I already proved what I started out to do that I could be better at one thing than any one else in the world. It wouldn't be any use again, even I could." The lanky Miss Marble had just slipped into her tennis shorts for a quick workout near the doctor's office where she now works as a nurses' assistant after deciding that making 13, 441 lectures in the past 15 year3 was too strenuous. "I enjoyed every minute of the lecturing on good , living, health and sportsmanship," she said. "I talked to as many as 10,000 persons and to as few as eight once in a Midwestern snowstorm. But I never had a home, and now I've got one a little one here in the San Fer nando Valley with a little pool." The former tennis celebrity slammed another ball through an opponent who yelled back, "Hey, calm down, Alice." Her play reflected a rugged health she has rebuilt from al most total collapse at one time in a. memory-filled career that arrived at complete triumph at Forest Hills, N.Y., in 1936 when she took the U.S.' women's singles title. Collapses On Courts A year earlier she had col lapsed on the courts in Paris during an international match with France's Mile. Sylvia Hen rotin one of the most dramatic occurrences of a sports decade. As she was carried off, doctors said she was through and had to give up the game. Ill health, aggravated by false diagnosis, temptation to utter despair and then recovery by faith and tenacity paved the comeback road and repeat per formances for world champion ships during 1938-40. Experts agreed that only a su perb technician one whose coordination resembled that of the star male player . could have reached the heights in an era filled with the likes of Helen Wills Moody, Suzanne Lenglen and Helen Jacobs. "Some are good enough to in clude me among these greats," she said humbly as she slam med another ball along the base line with evident relish for her handiwork at the age of 43. Three Extension Agents Promoted Promotions were announced this week by Oregon State col lege for three members of the Jackson county extension staff C. B. Cordy, county horticul ture agent, was promoted from associate professor to full pro fessor. Don Berry, also a horti culture agent, and Glenn Klein county 4-H agent, were promoted to assistant professors. The county extension service is operated under supervision of Oregon State college in conjunc tion with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Jackson county. The county agents hold faculty positions with Oregon Slate college. The promotions be came effective July 1. FOUR WIVES FOR MIKE Chicago M Little Mike, an 18-month-old chimpanzee at the Brookfield Zoo, had been lonely until he got four new playmates all girl chimps. Now there are five chimpanzees but only four chimp houses. His bachelor days are over. Daily's U-Drivs Medford Airport Lew Hoad Captures Wimbledon Mantle Wimbledon. Enelanri (IB Lew Hoad, Australia's blond bomber, became the first man in 19 ' years to sweep two straight Wimbledon tennis chamDinn- ships today when he routed Aus tralian champion Ashley Coop er, 6-2. 6-1, 6-2. Hoad, favored 3 to 1 to win the final. attacker) furiously right from the start and set the tempo for the match by crack ing Cooper's service in the first game of the matrh to th rhpprs of a gallery of 15.000, including ine LiuKe of tdinourg. Hoad was the first sines Don Budge in 1.437-38 to has t wn i n a row in the historic center court. The lopsided triumph car ried an additional bonus for the 24-vear-olri Aussie whn thus re tained his standing as the world's top amateur and kept nis ask ing" price at S100.000 to turn professional in the falL Never A Threat The 20-vear-old Cooner. who won the Australian crown late last winter while Hoad was ail ing, never was a threat after l.cw masted him for three serv ice breaks in the first set. Cooper's game suddenly fell apart and he erred frequently on shots he had made with ease in his earlier trek to the finals. The entire match required only 57 minutes. In mixed doubles, Luis Ayala of Chile and Mrs. Thelma Long of Australia, earlier winners over the top American team of Vic Seixas-Louise Brough, roll ed into the semifinals with an easy 6-1, 6-2 victory over Alan Mills and Miss R. H. BentW of Britain. The match was over in only 30 minutes. In women's singles, Althea Gibson Of New York and Tlsr. lene Hard of Montebello, Calif., won their semifinal matches Thursday to assure the United States its 13th consecutive Wim bledon champion in this divi sion. Gibson In Finals Miss Gibson, striving to be come the tournament's first Ne gro singles titleholder, wallop ed 6-foot Christine Truman of Britain, 6-1, 6-1, while Miss Hard continued her siirnrisinu play by. downing Dorothy Head ft.noae of Forest Hills, N.Y., 6-2, 6-3. The two Yank lassies will meet in the final Saturday. Meanwhile, Miss Gibson and Neale Fraser of Australia were scheduled to compete their mix ed doubles match today against iaresn Kumar of India and Edda Budinz of German Thp American-Aussie duo won the first set, 10-8, and the score was A MICK FIRST Atlanta, Ga. (IB George Amick of Venice, Calif., fin ished first in the 100-mile U. S. Auto club race championship Thursday. Jimmy Bryan of Phoe nix, Ariz., who won last Satur day's Monza 500 in Italy, dropped out during the 27th lap because of a broken connecting rod. O Company Conducts Training Meetings The Union Oil company is con ducting a series of safety and fire-prevention training meet ings at centrally-located com pany marketing stations through out the northwest, according to D. C. Craig, E u g ene district sales manager. Training program held July 2 in Medford which company con signees and personnel from near by marketing stations attended. Join the 73 'A Million Americans who Save at Tin Untti Stato Natnaat Bank W rmrtlaed GEt3DQ3 CEP GO I yifeyAfSSti c5 knotted at 7-7 in the second set Thursday when play was halted by darkness. If Miss Gibson and Fraser won their quarter-final match they were to return to the court later in the day to meet Roy Emerson and Margaret Hellyer of Australia in the semifinals. Miss Hard and Mervvn Dnw of Australia gained the mixed doubles semifinals Thursday by defeating Sid Schwartz of New iorK ana niimi Arnold oi Ked wood City, Calif., 6-3, 6-0. Kay Heads LaBatt Open With 144 Ste. Dorothee. Que. OB Herb Marcussen of East Lansing, Mich., shot a hole-in-one on the 145-yard 10th hole in the first round of the LaBatt Open golf tournament Thursday. Marcus sen, who only joined the touring pros two weeks ago, wound up with a par 72. Ste. Dorothee, Que. HB Jack Kay, making a bold bid to be come the first Canadian ever to win the rich $29,000 LaBatt Open, was one shot in front of the pack as 144 pros and ama teurs teed off in the second round at the Islesmere Golf and Country club today. The tall, handsome Mount Bruno, Que., pro, shot himself into the lead of the star-studded field Thursday with a competi tive course record, 5-under-par 67. But his fine showing was only one stroke better than those of two other shotmakers who are also looking for their first PGA victory newcomer Ken Venturi, San Francisco, and huge, long hitting George Bayer, Los An geles. Two strokes back of the 27-year-old Kay with 69s were Paul Harney of Bolton, Mass.: little Joe Conrad, the former British Amateur champion from San An tonio, Tex.; Ernie Boros, assist ant to brother Julius at Mid Pines, N.C.; Leo Biagetti, St." Paul, Minn., and Pat Schwab, another fifst year pro out of Dayton, Ohio. Washington Traffic Claims Two Lives By UNITED PRESS Two persora were killed in traffic and two drowned in .Washington during the holiday period starting Wednesday eve ning. The traffic victims were Gor don Gerald Shafer, 16, Naches, killed when the car in which he was riding went into a ditch, and Abraham Long, 35, Seattle, killed when the car in which he was riding struck a utility pole. Alex Baker, 34, Auburn, drowned Wednesday night in the Yakima river at Parker dam in a boating accident. Jack Man avie, 52, Port Orchard, drowned in Lake Cushman in Mason county when a boat capsized. 1 PERFUMED SCARECROW Atlata. Mich. (IB Howard Kurtz has figured out a way to keep the deer out of his garden, but Mrs. Kurtz is running out of perfume. Kurtz built a scarecrow that he sprays with perfume which he said is for discourag ing deer. Banks! Save &4 Safety f MEDFORD M. Mmf Scsui imu Cm