I J 4 s - 1 T . PAGE TEN CLUB ILL SPONSOR Valley Motor Show Room to . - Be Scehe of Exhibits; Classes Announced The annual fall flower Bbow which Is bring sponsored by the SrJem (Garden club. will be held st the Valley Motor com pany v show rooms, coreer of Center and Liberty streets,. Friday and Sat urday, October 17 and 18. The 'show will be open to the public at .- 1 o'clock .Friday' afternoon and . will continue through that even ting, closing Saturday night at 9 ; o'clock. Rules 1. Any person may exhibit, but .flowers must be grown by the ex hibitor. !. l; Exhibitors are limited to one entry 1b each class. 3. All exhibitors shall furnish .-" their own containers. 4. No one' except Judges may be present while the judging is in progress. 5. AU entries must be carefully labeled with the clf-ss in which ' they are to be shown, befexe they are brought to the show, where : they must be registered before being placed in the exhibit. . , . Entries must not be placed r uot4 -except w-ith the help of the staging committee. - 7. All exhibits must be in and registered by 10 o'clock on Fri- . clay morning. Judging will begin promtply at 11. ... S. All prizes and ribbons must be called for, and flowers and containers removed by 10 o'clock on Saturday evening. Awards of first, second and third prizes, consisting of bulbs end plants, till be made in all the classes listed below. There will also be a special streepstake prize of - $5 worth of dahlia bulbs given for the best vftss of three dahlia bloom?, ail different varieties. Ribbons will be awarded to commercial entries. Class I Ih-hlws a. Best,, vase of three dahlias, different varieties, special sweep Stakes entry only. b. Best vase of three dahlias, rte color and variety only. c. Best vase of Pompom blooms, Dot less than six or ever 12 flowers. d. Best vase of three cactus blooms. e. Best basket of dahlias, 12 or to ore. C1as II (ilajioli a. Best 6lngle spike. b. Best basket or vase of six or more spikes, one color and ,ta!iety. e. Best basket, 12 or more sep arate varieties, names. Class in Fall Flowers a. Best display of fall blooms, snnuals, perennials, or both, shown in one container, or sev eral; Forest Worker Is Injured WILL CITY, Oct. llFloyd N. Wood met with quite a serious accident Friday while working for the forestry service and was brought to Mill City for treat ment and later taken to the .borne of his mother, Mrs. Flora Wood, of Albany. The accident happened while Wood was working on a bridge In the Santiam forest and he plunged headlong into the North Santiam river. He received se vere bruises and cuts about the head but fortunately no bones v. ere broken. 9V JL mom. &D KJA4 Faff How Does Your Garden Gro w? By LILLIE L. MADSEN I was very glad to hear from o some of you following the appear pearatce of. my lily story in last Sunday's Statesman. A few of you wrote just to tell me how much you enjoyed the article, and tO'tbese I extend my thanks and the hopes that you will enjoy further garden material L may prepare. Others of : you wrote asking if I would give you. this or that information. To these I wish to . say that I am always pleased to receive such requests and that I shall endeavor to se cure for you such information as you desire. , -Evidently gardeners are now thinking of tulips for I had two requests for tulip information one from McMianviUe convening tulip planting time, and one from Wood burn asking about "good varieties." Tulips should be planted In September, October and up to the fifteenth of November, in Oregon. The earlier you get them ha, the better. My Wood burn corre spondent says that her space Is very limited but she feels she must have some tulips. A num ber of gardeners find it very sa tisfactory to plant tulips In the rose bed. The front part of the perennial border is also good. Here you can fill In with annuals when your tulip season Is over. i i t TIME TO U FOR By MRS. W. E. ANDERSON Thi ic tii. t1m. rst tfcA I when a good gardener begins to build his garden over efor next year. Too many persons are inclined to let their gardens die & natural death in the fall atfd leave all the plaiyiicg and planting till next spring. Cut dow.. all the old stalks and hum them. Spade over every bed and feed It with bone meal I or well rotted cimpost. Put three or four Inches of coarse sand over the delphiniums to keep the slugs from eating them as they come through in the spring. Reset the phlox, planting it deeper and in semi-shade if pos sible. Phlox needs deep plant ing, rich soil, mulch, some shade and lots of water. Get the tulips and daffodils in and transplant the hollyhocks, Canterbury bells, Sweet Williams, etc., to where you want them to bloom. Always keep in mind the vari ous blooming season s of the plants and so arrange color com binations In their border from early spring till late frost. If your garden didn'f quite suit you this year, choose a different plan for it now never hesitate to dig up, transplant or rear range. Just as you would the fur niture In the house. It creates new interest each season and flowers like change as well as human beings. Let s not endeavor to make our garden an Imitation ot some one s else but rather let It express our own individuality and . sense of beauty. SPRING HI Hi'JJ -' in mmrn , ' fa'. I A SMALL ENTRANCE GARDEN COTTAGE Tbis charming little lunbcr-built cottage ts aa emphatic denial of the fie qsently udt csggctdoa that it k impossible to achieve graaise aecfaitectual beauty is a very small borne of low coct oa a sinall lot. Although only twenty-four feet wide, thann-room cottar compactly pw vide every modern facility of the larger, more expensive: home. We find aa opea fireplace ia a ample living room, a qsaiat little Sting porch, s small cattaacs ball, for largt.closets, aad-exccQeat light sad vtntilatioa throaghont the boase, Setting .often means' even mots to the small home than to the imposing1, etmterei So 'saach ot the general appearance of this cottage wIS depend apoa its tsipoaadings that the anklet abovld aot neglect the catzaace tardea or the fag stoat walks intimate parte of tbii design, - Thi Flower Show, FHI NEIGHBORS - 'i If you plan to have s real tu- uip bed try turning the ground over fo s depth of two teet..Then place s two-inch layer ot well- decayed ' stable manure three inches below the base of the bulb or If you prefer sprinkle It ounces of bone meal to each square yard. of surface before you dig your bed. The early varie-t ties should be covered by about four inches of soil and the later sorts six inches. . As to the variety of tulip to plant personal taste enters into this almost ss much as Into- the purchase of sr new bonnet. Tour selection will depend upon wheth er you like them light .or dark, brilliant or delieate and so on. Perhaps you are one who likes the odd Parrot tulips, perhaps you like the double sorts. Again you might not consider anything but the single, .tall ones. Per sonally, . I prefer the' single varie ties and I do not think anything surpasses the Clara Butt or- Le Notre (Darwin tulips) and the Inglescombe Pink (Cottage) in pink Bhades. The Professor Rau wenhof, William Pitt (both Dar wlns) and the Grenadier (Cot tage) are very good in red. In clear yellow I rather favor the Inglescombe Yellow and the Par isian Yellow (Cottage). - There are many lovely bronie varieties, particularly In the Breeder, type. These include the Bronze Queen, Golden. Bronze and Prince Albert. La Tulipe Noire (Darwin) is perhaps the darkest of all tulips and is often called the "black tulip." The Ronald Gunn and Bleu Almable (Darwin) are good for those de siring tulips bordering on the blue. The . Pride of Haarlem, a rosie carmine flower, is one -of HIT favorites, and I am Dion torr fond ot tne white LaReine but, mere, i coma go on indefinitely; . there are hundreds of good sorts I would like to urge you all, how ever, to plant only one variety in a bed. If you must mix colors, at least choose a yellow and red or bronze, or a white and pink combination. Don't buy a mixed assortment and risk having' tall ones and short ones, pink ones and red ones, all toe-ether. Someone asked me what the name was of "the dainty little blue flower that blooms so early and must come from a bulb." I am inclined to believe that it is a Scilla. And if tou have no Scil- las in your garden, I am sure you win never regret adding them. Plant them In a clump of a dozen or so In the rockery, the border or even some place for naturaliz ing if you are lucky enough to have such a place. They come in pink, white and blue. Perhaps the smallest of these is the Scil la Sibirica, but three or four Inches high with . a wonderful blue coloring. The Scilla Com panulata is a larger and better known variety. BUILDING EXCHANGED JEFFERSON, Oct. 11. A deal was made this week, whereby A. A. Miller exchanged his building on Main street, occupied by the Barnes pool room, Goin's baroer shop and the store room occupied by W. 8. McClain, for a number of lots in the Belcrest Memorial park near Salem. OREGON STATESMAN, Sakm, ARE FLORAL RIVALS Rickey Residents vie With Each Other in Raising Beautiful Blooms By LILLIE M. McGEK RICKEY. Oct. 11 Though the majority , ot the members ef the community are flower lovers and try to make this community one of the best looking as well as the best In the county there is good natured .rivalry aong the flower growers. Unknown to her, Mrs. G. F. Bahnsen, a new member In' the community, has .been, attracting attention with her sweet peas i which hare . been watched with .'much interest ,thia summer. The sweet peas were planted early this spring, bloomed contin uously all summer and some, of the vines are sow over eight feet tail and. still blooming. When asked how she raised such beautiful sweet peas Mrs. Babnsen said she kept the flowers picked and as she does not have running wafer she manages that all wash water possible be thrown at their roots. Mrs. Bohnsen is a busy woman. She cares for the family garden, . which almost ex cels the flower garden in beau ty, sv does not have much time tor flowers. But next year she expects to raise more flowers and it is expected that she will carry Oregon, Sunday Morning, Octobev 1748 oft the honors In more than sweet peas. Other Gardens Have Attraction For a number of years Mrs. M. M. Magee has raised asters that have received much admiration, bat owing to late planting Mrs. Magee has been beaten two years in succession by Mrs. W. H. Humphreys, who has had not just a bed of asters but oceans of large asters In bloom since early in the summer. Mrs. Humphreys aiso has a unique sunflower that is new to this community. This sunflower does not grow as tall as the or dinary varieties, not are the flowers large, but It is double. Mrs. D. D. Binegar has had a beautiful assortment of pansies in bloom all summer that has at tracted much attention. An expert would be required to decide who has had the pret tiest porch boxes, but among those that have been very attractive and are still beautiful are those of Mrs. W. H. Humphreys, Mrs. A. A, Hager, Mrs. A. J. Hager, Mrs. George Hager, and Mrs. A. E. La Branch. Red Color Scheme is Used . Mrs. George Hager has carried out the red color scheme in her garden this year. Early in the spring red tulips predominated and for fall flowers she has salvia and red geraniums. Other things of interest to flower lovers that can be seen in the community from the highway are dahlias and late gladioli at the M. M. Magee home, dahlias at the A. I La Branch and D. D. Binegar home, yard and flowers at the F. Dick home and the new lawn of unusual beauty at the D. Maxfield home. . . Once Commonpk&ce Now Attractive The Tenth Advertisement of a Home Modernization Series sponsored by following.' Call them for mformation and estimates. COBB9 MITCHELL CO Lumber ' and Building Supplies 4f 8. lgth Telephone 813 , FRITS DRUG STORE Can't modernise without Sherwin Williams Paint 180. N. Com'L Telephone 123 HTJTCHEON PAINT STORE Paints, Varnish, Wall Paper J 54 South Commercial Tel. 194 MTjTC.1L SAYINGS Jk LOAN ASSOCIATION JL Salem Institution Organized 4n ma Let ns finance tout home on week ly or monthly payments 141 South Liberty Street IMPERIAL .FURNITURE CO. , complete Homo Furnishers I7 Court St. Telephone 1142 IjADD BUSH, BANKERS Established lt8 Capital 5QQ,C0I - . " and - Ladd Jb Bash Xrast Co. "... . :r . Salem.-Oregon . E03lEIl'tEISr;':; For Better Values la Draperies -497 Court St. t ; Telephone 1141 October l 1930 o LI F Reduction in Output Forces Drawing on Stored Stocks SEATTLE, Wash.. Oct. 11 For 11 consecutive weeks produc tion reported by 228 identical lumber mills to the West Coast Lumbermen's association has been below current new business, completely reversing the position of the industry during the earlier part of the yea The aggregate orders received .by these mills during this period J ujy 19 to October 4 exceeded the lumber cut by 5.87 per cent. However, according to the association, dur ing the past 17 weeks the indus try has operated at an average of 47.62 per cent capacity. For the current week orders were 10.86 per cent over production. In the 19 weeks since May 24 a group of 350 .mills reporting to the association have reduced their output by 851,048,000 feet which represents over six full weeks of production for entire lumber industry in the Douglas fir region of Oregon, Washington and British Columbia at present operating schedules. As a conse quence the association records show a decline in inventories for the industry since May 24 of 9.32 per cent. The improvement in the posi tion of the industry, according to the association, is due mostly to p mm INK MODERNIZATION Is the process of building anew house from the old. It is not a new idea. Some beautiful homes have been made from old houses. But the movement has taken on renew ed strength in 1930. Presiden t Hoover gave the idea impe tus when he made it a part of his economic program for the nation. Architects and builders see the practicality of it. There are millions of homes in America that are too good to discard and yet look obsolete and from the view point of the modern housewife are obsolete. Modernization creates new home values-new rental vaU ues and spells increased income for only a fraction of the cost of a new home. ' you haven't your original plans, draw rough floor plan - of your own. Take snapshots of the exterior of your, house and then consult the firms-listed in this advertise ment. . o . . ' COPELAND YARDS . .West Salem Telephone s7 Dependably Serving the Lumber Consumer DOCGHTON A SHERWTN Rooting Russwin Hardware Agents tor. Monarch 1100 Pure Paint ""FRANK' H. STRUBLE Architect Salem Bank of Commerce Bldg. Telephone 1810 . "Desirable Results Come From Proper Planning". SALEM HARDWARE CO. - The Winchester Store 120 N. Commercial St Tel. 172 Complete lines of Builders' Hard ware and Acme ?Q taUty Paint HAWKINS EOBEBTS Loans r Investment! , Insurance 25 Oregon Bldg. TeL 1437 HAKSEX ' Jk ULTEQOST ' Lumber Sash and Door 684 Mill 'y- ' Telephone 344 ; THEO. M. BARB it' Plnmhlnv TTatfnr 2 i , ... i,? B-, , Tel. 11 ; Ui s.. Commercial Op i?s to the fact that less lumber has been made than sold during tne rweni oeriod. thereby reducing the former excessive stocks. Buy ing, while a'reraglng for the year to date.- nearly 25 per cent lower than during the corresponding period of 1929, recently has been fairly stable, all markets consid ered. Production at 228 identical mills for week ending October 9 i totaled 116.5i6.S05 feet; orders j weVe 129.218,816 feet; and ship ments, 120,35.457 feet. Orders decreased about 2,000,000 feet, shipments were about 18.000.000 feet under last week at these same mills and production, de creased about 7.000,000 feet. BACK FROM EUROPE . MONITOR, Oct. 11. Hana Nel son returned recently. from a three months' trip to Europe. While there he Tisited old friends and relatives in Norway, Sweden and Denmark and reports having spent at. very pleasant summer.-He n n ot ttiA hnma of his daugh- ter, Mrs. P. A. Brennan. H. T. ! Jensen, who. accompanied Mr. Nel son to the trip to Europe return ' ed earlier in the summer and is I now visiting a nephew near Salem. CROPS LOOK BETTER TV A STTTXGTON. Oct. 10. (AP. A-general improvement '. in crop prospects averaging 1.9 reported today by the depart ment of 'agriculture. QUINABY, Oct. 11 Collas and Orl Massey and Haroia wurns oi Fayetteville, spent the week end at the home of the former's mother. Mrs. L. J. Massey E. FISHER- Plastering and Stucco Contractor r 1145 Cross St. Telephone SALEM BRICK A TJLE CO. Manufacturers oL Drain Tile, Building TUe, Brick Tile Road Telephone 8 IX J. A. BERNARDI Plumbing and Heating Oil Burners Our Specialty 448 Ferry St, TeL 2949 GEO. QUESSETH Eastman Furnaces and Hog Fuel Burners Century OH Burners IIS K. Capitol St, TeL 3124 GABRIEL POWDER A SUPPLY - COMPANY ; 'All Building MaUrial Union A Capitol Sts, TeL 728-224 -E. J. REASOR ' " - Salem's Resident . Painter Patronize Him and - You Patronlxt -. . baiem . Telephone 2081-W. V WELLER HARDWARE A COMPANY Court : Street v. - Telephone 88" St. Hardware - Paints - Houseware Public Silverton Smith- -Hughes Class do Stock Judging SILVERTON, Oct. .11. Th smith-Hughes boys larain joined a stock Judging '.group Wednesday of this week. This time tne stoca; juusms done at the T. A. Dimer'a farm four miles south of St. Paul. Classes in Duroc-Jerseys and Hampshire bogs were held. Bovs going from .SUvertoa were'Eldred Williams, Lyle Kel ler, Freeman Keller, Norrrs Langsef and Harland Loe, Other schools Joining the Silv.ertoD group of its afternoon of prac tice judging were Woodburn, Dayton, McMinnville, Newber?, and Canby. ATTEND BCCKEROO MEET HUBBARD, October 11 Dr. and Mrs. A. F. de Lesplnassc, Mrs. George' Grtmps and Edward O Erickson, stockholders .of the Molalla Buckeroo association at tended a meeting at Molalla Mon day evening. During the busrnesa session directors for the. new year were elected and Mrs. deLespin asse and Mr. Erickson were named, but did not aecept the nominations, giving as their rea sons for the declination that they lived too great a distance from the location of the enterprise. BACK FROM HUNT SCIO, Oct. 11. Mr. and Mrs. E S. McCrae and son, Archie, returned Wednesday from a suc cessful hunting trip. In the , Elk torn country, bringing back deer, and reporting a very picas ant. trip. o o o the PAINT -- V'". ' X ... ' I r - 1 . I. -- i .-i- it .-'. v .. .1 , . ...-"7- .-.-..,-,-:--