Tht OREGON STATESS1AN, Salra, Oregon, Sunday Morninsr, Jaljr 17, 1933 Traveler Wilson Binds Paris Statues PAGE BIX Finds Triumph Arch Strildng Paris Blen not Like Star Menjou but Women Are Dressy Animated Uitov'a KeU: C E. WiUaa. secretary ef tae Sales eaambee of ca Mree, U ea - extruded tea tfc reae sae frai tuee te Umm fnrvartU c CMBta ef his faBnHiM te Tae States Bii. JTeRewiag ia aaetaer ( fcia inlv ettaf letters. . By C. E.. WILSON When 70a visit Paris, come pre pared In an artistic spirit. Make op your mind to see the human form in paintings and sculpture, with and without clothing, but mostly withoat. For Paris is an artist and this temperament is expressed in sta taes, monuments, broad boule Tards sad lovely Hardens or paras. Wherever there ia a meeting of two or three streets, there you find a monument or statue ol 00 me famous pejrson. Bat more often the artist preferred the hu man form divine in the wsy of a beautiful woman. And it seems the sculptors, aaa matter of economy, prexerrea to acuip me young lady "as la." rathec than to cover her up Jn a lot of winter clothing. Same way with palat ini. Paris is a really beautiful city So many broad boulevards, broad sidewalks, flowers and statuary everywhere. The men. well dress ed, do not look "Frenchy" like Adolph Menjou, the movie, star hut the women one sees in the business districts, give the 1m wression of good looks and a eer tain French animation and styl ish clothes. They look just like ictures of French women. Where a few streets meet, the square or meeting place Is called a "place. and duly adorned with saaay statues and monuments. For instance, there is the Place de la Concorde, meaning the place X Concord and that is where dur tag the' French revolution, the gallotlne worked overtime and Marie Antoinette, Louis XVI and Robespierre and a couple of thou sand others. lost their heads. Sidewalk Cafes Plentiful Paris is the city of sidewalk eating. Nice big chairs and ta bles with big sun umbrellas over head, are everywhere. At one place along the stylish boulevard Champs Elysees, I estimated 600 chairs. (Tou pronounce it, "Shou ay-lee-say" with the accent on the lee.) Sidewalks on mala boulevards re twice as wide as those in iowa town Salem. The famous Seine river flows through the city and isa't quite as wide as the Willamette at Sa lem. On each side are tlae boule vards. Men may be seen fishing. right la the city. I saw one man land one about six Inches long. Most impressive sight was the Arc de Triomphe erected in IS OS by Napoleon to commemorate a is many victories. For comparison with the statehouse, note these figures: The arch is 161 feet high, while top of dome of state house Is US feet. Napoleon built his arch 147 feet wide and 75 feet thick. The state house ts 1SZ feet wide with height of building 2H feet. On Napoleon's arch re names of his battles and his generals or marshals who fell in battle. Ia those days the gener als were mostly on the front line of battle, and didn't live any too long. Went out to Mal-Maison, nome of Empress Josephine, first wife of Napoleon, She had gold trim med furniture and paintings on the ceiling of her bedroom. But the guide showed ns large bowl from which Josephine ate bread and milk for breakfast. Seems she was on a diet. Beee Louis XIV Paintings LAiis XIV, the French ktng who spent so much money in building and adding to a palace at Versailles, had the best paint ers of his time paint him all over the place. He wore high heels to make him appear talL The paint ings show this. They couidnt make much of a manly beauty of him a$ his nose was long, thin and hooked and he had a big ib derlip sticking out. Louis XIV spent too much money and Louis jlvi ana Marie Antoinette pata tor it with their heads. However, when Napoleon be came emperor, he lived la all those gold trimmed rooms, with paintings on the celling. In the room where he talked French pol itics, he had a little throne built, three steps up. All chairs in gold with deep damask upholstering. Bat the table is shown on which he signed his abdication, after the battle ot Waterloo. Remarks The French .taxi driver ts not near as big a robber as the New Terkr City taxi man. hot ho will almost tub over you la crossing the street. The French franc Is worth a little less rhan three eeate. Hotels quote prtce for . The Build - (W.J. K.) Not for an hour, not for a near horizoa Vcre sill and strut designed. . That in his thought as beacon towers should rise on The hilltops of mankind. ' " His trestleboard, insistent on precision,' - -j Makes not of point and place, "j"? But in the sue and splendor of his vision . , Accounts tor time and space. - - . ; Though earthquakes topple towers and rend asunder ; Stone walls with frenzied noise, t j " , -His beacons stand amid the smoke and plunder ; ; Imperial in poise.-'., 'r A ;' ...-t. j ' ! They lantern seers oTer Ufrjr. passes . I Where cosmic currents flow; - 4 They flood the crowded highways of the masses ' With truth's imperious glow. , , EDWIN T. REED. s of Salem age eculi By D. H. i The Day and the Journey I have Journeyed a day in stifling - heat. - ' M r . And- again In blinding asow. And whica I like most and which I like least f I confess 1 do not know. - A day I have known 1 on a coun try trail. Where lightnings livid flashed. Smash hits a plenty, with rain and hail. i For the thunder roared and crashed. ' t I have known day on a wind- less sea, No sound save the engines' toil. i In the nostrils a Teek from the boiler hold. And a tang ot heated oil. And there have such days. been many of Days not planned, that came. I take 'em mid like way seems best - but days .v . ea iu Take "era and like 'em just the same. I reckon a trying Journey makes the hsppiest of arrivals at the place you've been headed for. OaJda" and -Moths" The "Oulda novels were pop alar back in the sedate '90s. And they justified their-, popularity. for they were good novels. By "good" I mean that they passed the censorship board at our bouse and were at the same time interesting. ' I may i say j that a book which failed of passage by the censorship board at our house was usually read; in the haymow. It ; has always seemed to me reasonable that a person who writes a likable book may be considered to bo a likable per son. Madame De la Eame, who was born In Italy, has a French name and la classified as an Eng Hah novelist, was. I feel assured. a likable xerson. The i circum stance leading to her adoption of the pseudonym "Ouida" gives bit of evidence on-this point. A little niece, so the story Is told. was unable to pronounce her aunt's name, which J was Louisa. So Aunt Louisa discarded the "Louisa" . and became "Oulda1 and remained "Oulda" to all the world so long as she lived. I waa sitting here by the open window a . few nights ago it was Tuesday night, to be exact, and I had been for the better part of two hours down in the street mingling with several thousands of other individuals ! who find it Impossible to ignore the call of brass bands and drum corps and lines of marching men in uni form. I had turned on the light and was relaxing pleasantly when a party of moth millers arrived and began that' weird perform ance around the light which in the day of open flames resulted la the destruction of so many of the tiny creatures. And ia that moment came to my. mind a book which "Oulda titled "Moths," a story which dealt -with human characters who ia their frantic efforts to find pleasure came to their deaths In the flame. It ia somewhat pitiful to ob serve 2 or SO ot the moths striv ing for the great thrill of the flame where there Is no flame. An electric light bulb will not do the trick. And this accounts. room and then add j 15 per cent for service and an I extra frane government tax. I , . The French breakfast is two hard rolls. little butter and small pot of coffee. Any extra such as marmalade or Jelly, costs six cents - extra. Some: restaurants charge five centa Just to look at you and then add 15 per cent for service. Then you tip the waiter. Also tip about everything else that gets ia your path. I heard Paris policemen hsd to travel in pairs,' with a big stick' and handy gun.- Well, dur ing the day. the stick la painted white Just to control traffic, but they do pack a gun. . London po licemen do not. ! ! " No trouble to nick nn soma rreaca. -untree teua you wnere way out. "Defense du Fumer," means no smoking, i Ia England and Holland I of ten aaw the sign "Verboten," but haveat noticed It la France. My Oregon French, doeant aeem to work so la- asking directions when lest in Parts. I get out my map huliust shew where I want to go. The a there la a flow of French and I am directed on my way. , f . i er ates TALMADGE I presume, for the fact that 1 find in my drinking glass and in the WLshbowl, when water chances to have been left In It the remains of the moths which the night previous had held orgy around the light. A plain case of suicide, as the coroner said when was found the body of a man who held a revol ver in his left hand and had a bullet hole hack of his right ear. There may be more things in this world, Horatio, than are dreamfof ia your philosophy, but there are not a great many things in this world. Horation, which are not suspected by the news papers. I met up with Henry Porter of Aumsville on Court street Thursday, near thermometer that was registering close to 100 degrees. Mr. Porter stated that it is. not so hot on his farm as I t is in town. Stni, I don't reck- oa toit he ca.rae t0 town la or der to get warm. The Pig and the Sooeal One of the big pork barons of Chicago once stated, presumably with pride, that he made mar ketable commodity of every part of a hog except the squeaL It think I heard the squeal oa radio a few days ago. Perhaps that la one way to be come a baron or magnate turn the waste Into cash paste bright red label on it and sell It ror a a oxen, times what It is worth. I ran onto a sort of ba ron or magnate back la the bot toms years ago. He was running a store he was walking it low ly,, but of course you cannot properly say that a man is walk lag a store, because . It . would nave no meaning to a user of correct English.) I was attracted to the place by sign ia the window "Ice cream today." weii. it nad been Ions walk no from the river and the sua waa powerful hot. I had stepped on two blacksnakes , on the way and they had tangled themselves about my legs and unsettled my nerves. So I went into the store and ordered ice cream. "Five, tea or fifteen?" asked the men. "The nickel dish hind Is made from water Instead of cream, the dime, kind Is msde from skim milk and the fifteea cent kind is pure morning's milk with the cream still JLn it. Mighty rich, u-e fifteen cent kind." I ordered the nickel dish kind. Nor was It such a bad dish. The water was frozen to the consistency of snow and flavored. "I figger I make four and seven-eighths cents net on that grade," said the storekeeper. I don't know whether he ever became a magoatorial baron or not. I never saw him again. It has been a somewhat hectic week In Salem, what with the Veterans ot foreign Wars activi ties, the extreme heat of the weather and all, and probably for this reason one or two exception al motion pictures have been passed up which would not have been passed up otherwise. The "We're Going to be Rich" film. which Twentieth Century - Fox sent a cast to England to make, after vainly trying to lnduee Gracie Fields. Great Britain's premier box office attraction, to come over here and make the picture, passed at the Grand as i ordinary program feature. which; having thus been accorded much the same reception here that LJIllaa Harvey and Jessie Matthews films have been accord ed, might lead a person to sus pect that Salem does not favor the London music hall type of stars. It is a bit queer, the show business. Personally, I feel a sense of satisfaction In having seen Gracie Fields. I think the reason that Gracie went rocketing to the top of the English box office list Is the fact that In her the English public the 'arrya and 'arriets of that country- sees Itself. ' - , He or she who uses too many words spoils many a compliment. About Stamps By DORIS HAROLD - ' Hello Fellow Collectors: The fact that Postmaster James A. Pari weeks tour of the country doesn't Interior a bit wth sues race ot the United States. tm sesquicentennral of the northwest Territory la being commemorated by a new X-cent sump which waa released July 11. 111. Marietta, Ohio will bo first day of aale station as the first civil government 1a. the North west Territory -waa established there. The central design will bo the memorial statue of the eoleniaa ttea. of the wast which ts now be ing erected at Marietta. It win be printed fa purple and will be ordinary six arranged vertically. It has been announced that a new aeries will aeon appear for all Portuguese eelenlee. These will Include both regular series and airmail stampe. Riches at Turner; " -TURNER Mr and Mrs. Wal do Riches are vacationing for two weeks at the parental S. A. Riches home. Riches is an OSC graduate la "Smith-Hughes agri cultural department and has ac cepted - a position at Carnation. Wash.. which territory includes the fametw Carnation dairy. Motorloggers Complete : in nree ..: . ' Reach Mexico Ensenada Find Hotel at Ensenada Entrancing and City Full of Clamor This newspaper is co-operating with The Oregoniaa and the Oregon Stats Motor association in presenting a se ries of motorlogs designed to stimulata recreational travel. This artlrla la condensed from a full-pace article ap- pwnnif to iut ureaonuui July IT. it describes the aertMtd half of a motor log down the Three Flags highway. I By VINTON H. HALL Public Relations Director. Oregon State Motor Association Clean and sparkling under the morning sun. the little Nevada town ot Mlnden faded behind us as our white motorlog ear skip ped along the Three Flags high way toward Ensenada In old Mex ico. Reno. Virginia City and Lake Tahoe, rfolted the day before. seemed the high points In our mo tor cruise, but on this last lap of our trip we were destined to strike a lode of equally rich rec reational ore. Our road, still the fast, smooth route that we picked up four days earlier far north In Spokane, curl ed easily through Gardnerrllle and I rich farming; country in the shadow of the glistening snow capped Sierras. Ahead of us loomed the highest of the great Sierras providing an entirely different setting tor the Three Flags highway motorlog gers who had traveled over the rolling wheat fields of southeast ern Washington and northeastern Oregon, through sagebrush and tall pines, past Lake county's lakes and across purple plains. At Conway summit, 1131 feet hlfh. we brought the white Ford V- travel car to a stop In front of a service station-store, and a rugged, sun-tanned Individual ap proached us, his hsnd extended. ', "I'm Fred Curtis." he said, smiling broadly. "I've been ex pecting you and Mr. Snyder." Burt Snyder, president of the Three Flags Highway association. had Joined the motorlog party in Alturas "What do you think of onr highway?" Curtis asked anx iously. And as we nodded our en thnsiastle approval he ocntlnued "Beautiful country. Isn't It? Just look at the view you get from here. All of this was a great min ing area, worked as early as 1S20 Off that way Is Mono lake. TouH see it as you drive south." I See Famed Pass We finished our visit with Cur tis and started down the gently winding grade. Skirting Mono lake, we looked toward the Sier ras and saw a ribbon-like highway winaing high above. This was the famed Tioga pass, entering Yo- semite national park and a favor ite with recreatlonlsts after the snow has been cleared earlv In July. We continued south alone one or the most interesting stretches of this new Canada - to - Mexico route Inyo county. The ever-present Sierras casta cool reflection on our highway as we entered Owens valley, where Motorlog Route o n n o V? From Canada to Mexico over, the avew 1500 mile Three FUg ls. tcrioc rewte waa . the Jaswey k br the- AAA travrtrrs. And LAKE y j 4 WALLA saxO P tjoMwcw 5 & f I " - 1 OALTVOAS JcAHVlLiSv ; ifLcMcm Ail t . V ri-"gaert y:'-' ! "' TUljBa V . SAA CALCH1& 0 mag mouw a rip o : : Motorloggers Cross Into Mexico - " ' " ' vc " .. . Mexican marriage and divorcee Just across UMrborder (above). Street seen la Knseauul, goal of too motorloggers In their trip from the Canadian border. once the . farmers rebelled at the storing of their water supply for Loa Angeles consumption. In Lone Pine Walter Dow point ed west. . "That jagged peak." he said, "is Mount Whit noy, highest mountain la the United States. Tou' don't notice Its , height so much because the mountains around It are so high. But Its top Is 14,601 feet above sea level. "Now then," he added, "look over in that direction." He was pointing southeast, towards a deep, low-hanging hase. "Eighty five miles away lies Death valley, the lowest spot In the United States, 310 feet below sea level. So you see. in this section we have both the highest and lowest sec tions of the nation." Dow and Ellis guided us up a good lS-mile CCC road to the base of Mount Whitney Whitney Por tals they call it. It leads through the Alabama, a queer geologic structure Just , out of Lone Pine and a favorite, locale' for big mo tion picture productions. Its rocky formations are said to be the oldest known to geologists. After a comfortable night In Dow's air-conditioned hotel, we embarked on the next-to-the-last day of our Journey. A few miles south we relinquished the shelter of the cool Sierras and boomed suddenly into .the desert. Large, fantastic cactus trees bordered the wide, straight road, and the motorlog car struck up a steady, droning tune that soon set co-mo-torlogger Snyder a-noddlng. Scenery Typically California Time passed qulckty and soon we dropped Into Csjon canyon north of San Bernardino. Califor nia palms, heavy traffic, packing plants and service stations fur nished a sharp contrast for the motorloggers. Rolling southward, we knew that this was southern California, -Sagging orange trees, heavy with the fruit so much in demsnd on Oregon breakfast tables, bordered our road as it unfolded in front of us along Lake Elsinore, through the picturesque city of Escondido and toward San Diego. In San Diego hotel that evening Arnold Klaus, manager of the San Diego California club, had rath ered a group of city and state travel officials around a banquet table. Klaus, whose father oper ated the famous Crystal bar in Virginia City during the gold rush days, - told us about this southernmost California city and urged us to visit the old town. site of the , original mission and settlement of 1769; the Spanish village. Point Loma and other spots. Time, however, . prevented anything but a pleasant ride through- the tidy, palm-decked streets and along the waterfront. Next day. at the Mexican border. 1 miles south, we were surprised at the simplicity with which American tourists cross the Inter national line. Cars from the states, obviously pleasure seekers. were waved through with a mini mum of formality. . Returning, however, American customs offi cials are a bit more strict and we were advised to register our Ger man camera lens - to eliminate trouble when we checked in again. Ten miles south of the border the highway unfolded before us and we found It smooth, wide and fast. It emerged from the brown. sterile hills of Baja. CaL, and struck the coast line. Cool salt air gave u srellef from the stuffi ness of the two border cities. Mex ican hovels, about which lounged dark-skinned farmers, pin m p senoras. dropped behind us. In less than two hours we had covered the fiS miles from Ti juana.' rounded a point of land and Todas Santos bay stretched before us. Sprawled on the tar side of the gracefully - curving' shore line lay Playa Ensenada, low and rambling along the sandy beach - for nearly a quarter of a J miie.. . s Estaenada waa a monotone la I brown, bat its stores, streets aad1 ; - avre advertised at people gar It Indescribable color. We halted the white car at the entrance to a new green-grey building in front ot which a alga spelled "Camara Naclonal da Commerclo Industria do Ense nada." This was the chamber of commerce. Luis G. Beltraa (we soon called him Louis) waa wait lng tor us ' with a. delegation ot city offlclala. Visit Plan After viewing an open-air pro gram staged by. the public schools, we drove to Playa Ensenada wnere ten years ago there was nothing save the sands ot Todos Santos bay. Today Playa Ense aada dominates the shore. Mod ern in architecture, yet built in true Spanish style, Plsya Ensena da is an entrancing series of pat ios, gardens, walls, doorways and balconies. It is a hotel built for those who love comfort, peace and leisure. Most everywhere, through its rambling corridors, in its cheerful dining rooms, is histor ical ironwork, many pieces ob tained from a monastery built In Castile before the renaissance. Murals, bold in line and subject were created ay Martinez. We asked Bruno Fagalll, young and handsomer manager, about the gambling edict that closed the doors of the giant casino, oc cupying the west end of the ram bling structure. He simply shrug ged his shoulders and said, hope fully: "Some day maybe. It will come back." We could hear in hia voice the story of Playa Eh senada as it used to be less than two years ago when money-mad men, diamond-clad women swarm ed the gaming-tables; when the movie colony moved south in droves; when the click of the wheel and rattle of dice mingled with the sound of music, tinkling of glasses and gay laughter. With Louie. Santos B. Cota, chamber president; Luis M. Sa lazar and others, we v drove the beach, smooth and straight, they say, as Daytona in Florida. That night Louie took us to a boxing match, then showed us Ce celia's, the red spot that few vis itors fail to miss, whether alone or accompanied by wives. "Ensenada is a lot like Reno, don't you think?" asked Louie. "Someone told me the main streets look much the same.. J've never been to Reno." In a way; yes, Ensenada was like Reno, but the main street was as different as day is from night. It has glamour, but a glamour ot of its own. It has character, in its typical Mexican way. It is an attraction at the southern tip of the Three Flags highway, and the end of our motorlog, that should not be missed, Next morning we said good-bye to our Mexican friends and start ed the little whits car on Its long trek homeward. We had com pleted a 1500-mile tour from Spokane south along the amazing new Canada-to-Mexico route. We had plenty to talk about and much to remember, and a new road to advise for south-bound va canonists. Improvement Meet At Grand Island Chooses Officers GRAND ISLAND A business meeting of the Yamhill county District Improvement company No. 1 was held at the local achoolhouse Thursdsy night. A report of the work In pro gress along the river was given. Officers and directors elected included Roy fe.. Will ot this com munity, chairman; Lynn Cubser of McMinnrille, and represent ing the Union vale district, . secre tary; iR. T. Kidd. Albert May. C. A. Rockhill. George Asher and J. H. Freshoar. - Ripe tomatoes anC sweet com of the early market variety are being enjoyed for table I use at 1 the Ernest Douglas home. Mr! Douglas has also started mar- ketlag his early potatoes. Irlow Docs Your Garden Grow? Add a Handful of Alum to Heavy Lime Soil If Its Blue Hydrangeas You Want By LILLIE L MADSEN Geraniums Bacterial leaf spot sems to have ttacked geraniums rawer uauij wu -o from ; the com plaints that are reaching me. The leaves turn yellow and later drop off. Some gardeners tell me their plants have almost completely died. Spray the leaves with Bordeaux a coupio ot umeni,-j. ( at week - Inter- tyAQ vala. i Also pick pr4 . . . T T oft and burn the most l badly af- um U Maesea fected leaves. Stir up the soil about the plants. Frequently lack of air circulation or too rich a soil will bring about this condition. Dig in a little Bor deaux In dry powder form around the plants. Hydrangea - - Chlorosis some- tJL .tt-tir. hwt-.n-o. ..fT,o - the leaves to turn yellow. Some growers think t a i Is because there is too much lime In the soiL In tact the commqn pink hydrangea will turn blue in an acid soil. It has been suggested If the blue hydrangeas are deslr- od and 11 there seems to be too much limo In the soil add a hand- ful of alum. Hydrangeas want a lot of moisture during the warm weather If they are to be it their best, n.trtn. Tfc. K rC" definite known control for the catalpa twig blight which will sometimes kill branches right back ' to the trunk. When one notices vth blight appearing. It wis ! to cut off the affected branches, spray , around them with Bordeaux and cover wound with corrosive sublimate. Fir trees It U difficult to control the pin rust that takes our evergreen trees. However. I would suggest, to Mrs. L. R. who complains that very large fir tree growing on her lawn Is ay- tag. branch after branch, that she have the tree topped and also the branches headed hack. I have been told that early August is a good tin. to do this. All dead or dying branches should be cut off. All the cuts should be painted over with one ot the disinfectants suggested for this years ago which were saved In this manner. Fighting the Borer !Jn.tBf:?, oir. h-for th. .r. n Hi.. covered. . This pest Is on the in crease and It is likely so because not enough precaution Is taken to do away with it. Notice the holes in the stalk of the slant. inject a few drops of .nicotine. rotenone or pyretarum and close the opening with clay or some such material. In the fall be sure to burn all old stalks and weeds which may be growing near by. Kedbud Twig blight and bor er both seem to affect the redbud particularly in dry. seasons. To Mrs. P. M. who says her little newly planted redbud Is not do ing well and from her descrip rom her descrlp - tion might be affected by both he borer, I would he tree nlentr of the blight and the suggest giving the tree plenty of water and some fertilization. The tree will outgrow the Injury If considerable care is given it. Cut oft and burn the twigs affected Spray with Bordeaux. Next spring remember to spray early with Bordeaux. . This will do much to prevent the blight from taking noia Some growers suggest cutting tne norers out with a sharp anxre. borne suggest wrapping the young trees from the ground up , to the branches and leaving this on for two years. Before you do any wrapping however, be sure you are not wrapping up the borers. There is also a nicotine paste which is squeezed into the holes and thus suffocates the borers Poison' oak Sodium chlorate will eradicate' poison oak. Sorav it on the shrub two or three times at week-intervals. Treating Flowering Almond r lowering Almond - G. IL writes thst he noticed that some ot the branches on his flowering aimona iree wuted about - a month ago and are now com. pletely. dead. He wonders what he should do. This Is one of the bad features of the flowerinr almond and seems to have to be continuously fought here in the wiiiamette valley. Cut off all the withered and dead branchea and burn. As soon as the. wilt waa oiscoverea a Bordeaux apray should have been a Dolled. Snn now. Then spray again during- ma HoruiBi ume ot the tree or shrub and again in the sarin "w iuo ousn nas leaved out. It can be controlled and I think me beauty of the flowertnr ai. mono is -worth the effort hut enon must be expended if this shrub is to be cutivated here. ueipnmium BInekenfne- f th. delphinium flower stalk is a mite known as Blacks. Nanhathaien Hakes around the base of the plant will prevent the nest from appearing on the plants. A nico- wne spray will control after i haa appeared. Magnolia Mrs. W. B. reports scale on her maa-noila tr. This Is the first resort of tf.. Magnolia scale that' has reached me. ; It is said to he the iirrr .scale found. ' References rtra tn young of this scale as hatching in late July and eariv a with the suggestion that a rote none or nicotine spray be used at this time, it ia well to ex amine lilacs 'and other - ikns. given to harboring scale and If any la noted thea spray at this Lnn. ,r ZZTlri I r i . l miaciMe ell Is suggested. Red Spider -re control r. 'it this Infinitesimal insect must be as persistent as the control of black ,pot on roses,- A sulphur dust Is recommended as a good control of the spider. Nicotine spray will also help control. Snapdragon Rust Snapdragon rust Is very serious and control must be effected 'or the entire plant, is soon destroyed. If the' rust. has gained any headway it is the wiser course to pull up and burn the plant. If It has just ' appeared start' systematic spraying or dusting with Bor deaux or-"a sulphur dust. This must he done once a week for the remainder ot the season. Try next year to purchase rust-re- j slatant plants They are remark- j sbly successful, although the1 plants do not grow as Large as some ot the other varieties. Earwigs Eat Foliage , Violets A number of things might be eating your violet foli age, D. A. Likely the leaves are l being eaten by some small cater- ?A"r beetle or earwigs. The "4 i'Pns wmcn in erl7 "pff J 1 befve, our fa- fr0" aplttle bug. Is plentiful this "eOH does ' considerable ""'"S louage. a smsii green worm, aooui a nau-mcn long is isoJ this-season. Earwigs, f 1 leatt in our rLof lhe TaN l" eros. We are being eJ"wigs run in cycles, h her continue to increase un ' iaej reacn tneir' peak and l men graauauy decrease, we are that they have reached their peak this season and most ot us are doing what we can to help their rapid de cline. I found large quantities of ear wigs resting in the soil around my stocks. I dug in small handful of naphthalene flakes around each - plant and now the earwigs have disappeared from Vrlb,; damar t th. .toek. i, "J .if.iJ! TtV C?lZLJm n! "f !. "ff"' PKrt ZLct ' lTm ntdln la the -.SS'-f' h..f, bttiL in'it u 1.7 f .DI , J U? "-1"1 l?, htT8 that place. TKaw JaIh. - .r1- mi sur faces of the leaves. Leaf hoppers for Instance, are pront to feed 2ift jffL! -i!f.!.0f ieaf' Primrose and strawberry veer. 11: The same weevil feeds on the roots ot both of these slants. The plants turn brown and die. ArsenaToof 7ead 'Zt&JS into dow? ha suggested as a good control. Todd Boy Injured. EVANS VALLEY Dean Tod. 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mm. O. 3. Todd, fell from a cherry tree near his home and broke both bones In his right arm. 1 ci:imimVmrjzh &jrjh rtiDVAA. 1 . i kv; 7' . dj,. f I L One gallon of SWP house paint covers 800 square feet of surface ... at a cost of less than lc per square foot ! ' And look what you get for this low price. Beaufy no other house paint can beat. 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