.dpsanrcfleimBnng V v A rt of color and spring fra grance greeted the thousands of visiter to th Jotijt primrose-da1- fxul skew heidf , ,., WedeeiKiay and I I tiwinM a hi sunken ballroom of the Fcrtland W hil tm-dreds-f differ ent pfimroMi. were Uw-n, no i one t i tjr V rol btttr' like than the ; i deep wichea, ' I exhibited fro mV . I the fterdens of nuuie Msofcen . Cart Starker. This, shown for the first tkne in the Portland show a vnr mo. was watched for again ' by scorn cf visiteca at this show who recalled It. The'Moodview garden club won first garden dub exhibits with Its disday of the dainty mue no- sea. Equally small and dainty, - and greatly admired by the show eoer -were the Ceetuaoides and the Juli&e. Odd primroaes were plentiful, nd-wtuie wnfc of these were at tractive, such as the' large, and rather -heavy Pulverulenta, i beautiful- shade of rose-pink, oth ers -were simply sstnethxng you felt -you should put salad dress ing tk and serve up for luncn eon. . ' . ' Auriculae were more' plentiful than in some former year. -The re were saore of the greens, greys and yeiiows in 4ke exhibit of these. My favorite was perhaps the Wiper Auricula, a red ruffled, 'cream -centered blossom, medium large. Some of the auriculae mea sured as much as two inches across a single floret. Late Daifsdils Shews It was a surprise to many of us Now! irs MUSICAL BUSS YOU SIMPLY CANT MISS! r r 1 I 1 J J J & y A tvteat W C W set to rnvtat ... M j A lee . V. ; oeoiife... 17 A retMbew a y W scree. I A'v 32 him O A JOAN ' Extra! Ip Vv , "Stork A" Crasy- how very many late- daffodils there are. All flower growers know there are a few late-bloom ing daffodils, but at the Portland show there seemed to be hun dreds. I was astounded at the am ount of Barriis, Among my fa vorites was the white and orange Roman Star. Some lovely seed lings were shown from the Con wy cuossom lann ai Eugene, v It would be difficult to cover the amount of "favorites" at the daffodil show in even twice the space allotted . me. so I .shall Just hit the high places of , -a tew I couldn't pass by without a sec ond glance: The white Silver Chime, Triandrus hybrid of white clusters: the double clus ters of Cheerfulness; the Leedsil Fairy Circle: Nova Scotia, a white with orange center; Dick Well band, a white "with a very deep orange center; Silver Jsalver, a flat white bloom, fully three in ches across: the double white Swansdown; Polar Sea, a beau tiful white with a tiny green cir cle in the center; and the tiny bright yellow Jonquilla - Simplex which one seldom sees any more. Gardea Calendar April 14 "Spring Comes to America," illustrated lecture . by Margaret McKenny, sponsored by Salem Garden club at Bush school, 8 p. m open to the public April 17 Salem Rose Society, iMLA, 730 p, m. J ' April 18 Stayton Garden club. April 2 to 27-Salem Men's Garden dob annual spring flow er show. . . : . , May '21-24 National conven tlotVeMen's Garden clubs of Am erica, Portland. . May: 23-24 Spring flower show of Portland Men's Garden club, cmc auditorium. Portland. QoesUeas and Answers F. L. writes that her azaleas grow well but do not bloom. Wants to know reason. Ans.: : With that meager infor mation, I could only venture to guess. Perhaps the bushes were set too deep. This will frequent ly prevent bloom. Professional azalea growers will tell you that the bushes should be aet no deep er than they were growing in the nursery row. If the soil is too stiff, blooming will not be plen tiful. Plenty of leaf mold, peat moss or decaying leaves should be used as a mulch. C. A. L. writes that her tulips. pianiea last year, Tailed to come up this year although they bloom ed very well last, year and she had been told they were hardy nere. - Ans.: Perhaps moles are the answer. Moles, seem exeeDtionallr fond of tulips. Of .course we are told it isn't the moles that eat the bulbs, but the mice which follow in the runs provided by the moles. But I trust neither moles nor mice. It is usually safest to lift the tu lips, remove the offsets and store until October and then replant. u you can, plant the bulbs in wire mesh baskets buried in the gar- aen. ims win tend to keep the rodents from destroying the bulbs. T.AJL. asks if aucuba will grow In the shade or If It' must have sun.'., . Ans.: Aucuba is usually listed as .growing in either sun or ahade and will grow quite well In a sha dy spot. Mexican orange grows well in such a location also but fail to ,bloom. Our native salal makes an attractive shady-spot low shrub. Oat. Z TM. f&GBEEIJ YEABS" I Li urn . mTtr,ctonr 1 1 I Carele f Vs mm. at M aa 1 Mat Dslly From 1 TM. ,r-: ' ISoYf' Showing! . - m 1 1 .Iiesscs rw Sam fit Nwlf With treat Stock Average Hits Record Low for Year NEW YORK, April l-VPi- Stocks this week suffered their sharpest relapse in better than six months and today hit a new aver age low since early December in the broadest and livelist Saturday market since March 8. Selling in the final. session, rel atively heavy for an. Interval, dropped , leading steels, motors, rails and industrials fractions to 2 points.' From Monday oh, with the exception of a slight recovery Thursday, liquidation was blamed mainly on the stalemated tele phone strike, chances of a walk out in the steel field at the end of April, generally- confusing wage price situations and doubts re carding business prospects and tax relief. Extreme declines were reduced in the majority of cases at the close. Transfers of 630,000 shares compared with 270,000 a week ago. For the six sessions the ag gregate was 4,633,910, largest since the period concluded March IS. In the preceding 5-day week the total was 3,120,490, a low since October 14, 1944. ' The- Associated Press 60-rtock composite was off .7 of a point at 62.7 on the day, a bottom since- last December 3. For the week the drop was 2.4 points, which was the widest retreat since the period of last September 20. Both the rail and utility indexes re corded new lows. Ten f Fred Astaires9 Cavort in Blue Shies9 Now at Elsinore Just to prove that the movie camera is quicker than Xhe eye. Paramount introduces a new wrinkle In trick photogrsphy in Irving Berlin's "Blue Skies," the lively Technicolor musical bow playing at the Elsinore Theatre. The picture, featuring 33 Berlin tunes, star Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire and Joan Caulfield. In the film Astaire does a super-fast tap dance to the tune of Irving Berlin's "Futtln' on the Ttitz." Clad in top hat, cutaway. striped, trousers and white spats, the famous hoofer twirls through the first half of the dance all in one. piece. Then he seemingly splits into ten Astaires, each tap ping like mad and twirling tiny editions of that famous Astaire cane. Nat Dene With Mirrors And." states Director Stuart Heisler, "we didn't do it with mirrors. It was done -by means of a variation of the split-screen process, but Just how is going to remain Paramount's secret" Gordon Jennings, Paramount's special effects expert, explains that he "split the screen" nine times to accomplish, the feat of showing the star dancing in front f a chorus of nine identically dancing selves. Ordinarily the multiple illusion effect is achiev ed through the use of a series of mirrors and the simple split screen technique is employed in showing an actor playing a twin role. . "If youH watch several of the Valley Obituaries Portland Livestock PORTLAND, Ore., April U(AP) OSDA) Cattle for five days salable 1786. total 2592; calves 24 and 2SS; compared week ago' market generally steady, early weakneaa on lower grades recovered late, some good beet cattle strong to 23. imtancef SO higher; medium-goad fed steers 19 50-Z3 00. top 24.00 for good -choice grades: medium food heifers 18.50-22.73, common down to 14.00; medium-good beef cows 15.50 1S.00; few to lt.00 with specialty young cows to 20.00 and 20.25; cannera and cutters 10.50-13.00; shells down to 9 00. fat dairy type to 15 00 with outstand ing; Holstelns to 17.00; good beef bulls strong at 17.OO-1S.0O, odd selects to IS .50-1 9.00. s new high; good-choice verniers 23.00-26 50; odd selects 27.00 28 50, latter new high. Hogs for five days Salable 124. total 4183;- compared week ago market Steady after losing early 90c advance; good-choice, ISO-154 lbs. early . 24.30; late aales mrmUy 28 00; heavier - and lishter weights salable lM-S Sn below prevaillnw top; good sows unchanged, mostly 21. 50-14.40. good -choice feeder pigs 2J .50-30.50. - t. Sheep for five days salable S44. total 1069; market weak with late undertone bearish; good-choice . wooled Jambs 20.5O-2I.S0. atothing of Quality to pass 2030 late: few feeders -17.00: eood chote' wooled ewes l0-9J4; odd shrrn ewes 7.00 down. ' Portland Grain V I I , JOHN VATMI RUSSELL - - ws taesfTNg I 1 i i - Al t t i S casot I Mitai sua - I t Thrill Ce-IIit! Sidnay . N ToUr "Dangerous Cent, From 1 P.M. New! WUlUm Pewell Eleaaer Williams "Hoodlum Saint" . Tim Holt y Tklhting Frontta. . . iioy! LOVERS... t HAUNTED BY i - i i A MAD I suspiaoN THAT TURNS p INTO TERROR! RAniAHlKE IlEPBURIIROBIfir TAYLOR - telawaa aiiHiaali tHe s swcfel at his ffMM asfen i ew. - . , mm m v J 1. w mm m- 'BTT Co-nit! Khythm! Jeaa Pertee-- Jaa Savit la - BTrrr CO-ED" PORTLAND. Ore April -AP)-r-No futures quoted.. No cash grain. . Cash wheat (bid): Soft white 2.30: soft white (excluding Rex) -2J1; white club 231 western red 2.31. . Hard red winter: Ordinary 221. . ' Na hard white Baart quoted. Todays ear receipts: Wheat S3, flour S, -eornw 20. oats 1. millfeed-7. Sal em Markets BUTTER. FAT Premium No. 1 No. '2 - " PRINTS Wholesale' r- Retail EGG, -Buying Pries Extra large Mediums . .,, . , i. , Standards . .73 J - -w : , .44 . ' -3S ; JO1' JO, K .4.. . J3 ; iJVCiTOCK mi Valley Pack) . Top lamb 14.00 Yearling . lamb . . . . J " Ewes - , , - -a- 100 Veal 1J to 13.00 Pullets, creeks EGGS. SelUag Prk, -Wholesale, large l. Mediums -POULTRY Colored heas. No. 1 -No. g .. , ,T rnrers Dairy cows . ., Dairy bulls ,, , n-. Hog prices 35c pel Portland prices et R Hotirht subier SAO to 1330 . 10.00 to IS M hundred under for each particular facfeslarid Bonds ffwnild hy Assnrtsted Prew April STOCK A VERA OES -30 ' , , 1 .Indus. Saturday 68.1 - Previous day ' 89. S Week ago -Laos Month ago 88.1 Yer aeo loo 1S47 liigh M S 1847 low 91 -NtwlMl lows. BOND AVERAGES 20 Saturday Previous day wee it ago Month ago Year ago 1947 high 1947 low New 1947 low. 12 ...v- ' ' 13 : IS - M Rails Util Stocks 31.7 43 S2.7 323' 43J-:S4 .23 S .33A' 44.3 i3J . .S 385 S3- est IS 10 ITtHToe'en 108.3 T3 L 10 tails Indus. 93 a In t . 94.0 1042 105.4 75.S ua lnial iihi a ..L S4.7 103S 1M B TSI IMA loss inaa fas .Vt.X 104 2 109.4 7 93 9 103.1 104 9 74.S Lewis Isaac BarselL ' MONMOUTH Funeral ser vices was held at Dallas April S, for Lewis Isaac Bursell, 78, who died at a Portland hospital April 2. Born '. in M 870, he came west with his parents in 1$74, and they settled on a . farm at Sil vexton. He attended Pacific uni versity at Forest Grove and was maried to Lula Belle Liordon in 1899. They established their home on a farm northwest of Mon mouth where they lived for more than 40 years. He was an active member of the local grange and Farmers Union. Mrs. Bursell died in 1842. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs Hazel Land berg. Portland; two sons, Homer G. Bursell, Portland, and Kenneth Bursell, Monmouth; nine grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. R. L. Patterson of Beaverton. F. A. Garbe. SHAW, April 12 Frederick Arthur Garbe died at a Salem hospital April 10. Born Aug. 28, 1874 at Terre Haute, Ind., he came to Oregon In 1889, locating at Brooks, later in Aumsville. where he resided for 56 years. Married first to Amelia Eastburn who died In 1930, he married Grace Jones Jan. 7. 1932., He was a charter member of the Farmers Union, member of the Odd Fellows lodge, was secretary of the AumsvUle Mutual Tele phone company for more, than 20 years, and was a director on the local school board for a number of years. - Survivors are the widow. Grace Ellen Garbe, two daughters. Ter ressia Ilean. LaVeta May; seven foster children, Ralph E. Garbe, AumsvUle, Mrs. Virginia McGow- an of Vancouver, Wash.. Mrs. Pa tricia McDonald and William P. Jones of Westport, Wash, Merl P. Jones,' Woodburn. Kenneth A. Hardin,- Portland X one sister, Mrs. M. A. w right of Aumsville. Funeral services will be held at the Weddle funeral home in aiayion, ivionaay at z p.m. Leoise Longsdorf SILVERTON Funeral serv ices - for Mrs. Louise Longsdorf, 71, will be held Tuesday at 2:30 at the Memorial . chapel of the Ekman Funeral home with burial in the Silverton cemetery.- Mrs. Longsdorf, who died Sat urday at her home, 808 N. 2nd St., was . bom Sept. 21, 1875 in Wisconsin.- She had lived in Mar ion county for 30 years. Survivors are the widower,, B. O. Longs dorf; daughter.' Mrs. Melvin Tuf teskog. and one grandchild, all of Silverton; a sister, Mrs. Emma Muceus of Leon, Iowa. . WINONA CHALET Italian Dinners, Spaghetti, Raviolas, Pan Fried Chicken, Choice Steaks ' 2jililcs Out on Dallas Highway , . For Raaarrorttona Phona 2-5190 l; 3 Days Left : To See ." Cant From 15:45 The Wonder-Picture of the Year now finishing third tveek.in Salem! "Jalsan" Today at 12:45-2:00 - W - 7:41 . II PJt mum snaAcui Toe fc y i s nijjwu " .viihii ui. wii j , M . J 'Astaires . very closely," Heisler said, "you will notice slight dif ferences in the action which proves" that mirrors weren't used. As a matter of fact; the type of set used and the effect desired made it impossible to use the mir ror method. Other Technlqaes Used This new secret split screen technique wasn't the only inno vation in movie making used by the Paramount experts working on "Blue Skies. Art Director Hal Pereira devised a new system of making the set models of luctte instead of the usual wood and paper mache. Because the hicite is transparent, Pereiraj Director Heisler and the photography di rectors, Charles Lang, jr., and William Snyder, were able to study every camera angle and lighting problem with ease, thus saving days of production time. "The costs run toi about $4,000 an hour when a picture like 'Blue, Skies" Is in full production," Pro ducer Sol. S. Sieget said, "so it can easily be figured out just how much money was saved. So successful were these lucite model sets thaftthey will be stan dard from now' on for every im- 4Xrtant picture at Paramount. Hobby Festival At Silverton Is Well Attended SILVERTON More than 500 attended the Silverton Parent Teacher association hobby and antique show Friday. Some came from; Portland and surrounding towns' were repre sented with groups! who came to view the exhibits. Mrs. Ole Me land, president of the PTA, Mrs. Craig Clark and Mrs. Ray Boe, co-chairman planned the affair with the assistance of numerous committees. -Winners of the grarid awards were Harry L. Riches, Mrs. B. F. Browning, Carrol Huggin and Al len Pfeifer. Riches displayed a collection of guns and sabers from North Africa. Italy Sand Germany acquired while he; was in the army. Mrs. Browning's collection of buttons included more than 10,000. A church, made from colorful buttons and lighted from within, was one of the oddities of the show. Huggin had a collec tion of dolls from 28 different countries and Pfeifer one of paint ings. Among the more valuable col lections were those of antique glass and chinaware. Mrs. R. E. Kleinsorge won a blue ribbon on her table setting of Wiltshire plates, old pewter and glass on a red table cloth. Lora Ames "Al len and Jack Medcalf had non competitive displays of their oil paintings. Announced as the Jirst melodian to arrive in Salem and used in the Silverton pioneer country to furnish music at dan ces was the -one exhibited by Mrs. Lei a Shepherd. Mrs. Merle Foote had a complete record of World War II in newspaper clippings mounted carefully in acrapbooks. Grain Market On Downswing CHICAGO, April 12H43)-Corn paced a moderate downtourn in grains today. Smaller June- ex port allocations, weakness in cash wheat and a slump in -securities combirled to exert a depres sing influence on futures contracts. Deferred corn futures lost more than 2 cents. This was the weak est grain, and the selling con tinued to be based mainly on April 1 farm stocks. Supplies of 1,295, 000,000 bushels were, with 4he single exception of 1943. the larg est on record for the date. Final prices were, somewhat above the day's lows as a rally developed in the last half hour. Wheat finished unchanged to li lower. May $2.57-S2.S7H, corn was 2xi lower to V4 higher. May $1.754-1.76. and oats were i lower to s higher. May 87 ta -88. CRYSTAL 1 GARDEIIS WED.fflGHT : it Van Amilage and his 13 pc. Recording Orrliestra Grace Whitehead and Her Orchestra Pi avmz Old-Tine Dance WI. and Sat. Tba StaUaman. Salem, Ora7oa, Sunday. April H. 1M7-U AUTHORIZES EtTEADmO.V Governor Earl Snell Saturday authorized the extradition of Ru- fus Lee who is wanted at Stao Uausv Calif, on a forgery charge. K is under arrest In Linn county. - ' j - . ' - The I N FA C T G h oiceit Steak ' Most Delicious Chicken Finest Baked Ham " Most Unique Dish Vx..- (Barbecued Crab) If you want all that goes to make a pleasant meal Homey atmes- phere excellent service warm lighting fireplace SPEND AN EVENING AT Shattuc's Chateau rbene ttS3 M Eleclrical Conlrcciors Specialist in ildcrpsic mum mm Service, Quality and Reliability Call Us For an Estimate Phone : C20B S1S s -3035 Portland RJ. w Salem, Oregon " 3 Msaaas b b . . . Popnlai access fcl Be A GoodS ameer It Doesn't Cost It Pays! OREGON m STITUTE OF '.-DANCING 155 S. Libert Phone 6128 12 to 10 F.'BL t