JO Thm Stcrt( Seism. Oregon. Sunday. Torauary 23. 1343 'Don't Cook flow but ... looking at the ardiitecfs draw ing of tho proposed county courthouse, we wonder why the officials don't just hire the top designer over at the Salem Box factory and save the county some money on fees. His rates are probably low. Makes it legal . . . Us Democrats, we do things up right We don't swear on just one Bible, we swear on two Bibles. Without a care . .' . looking out of our frosted window this morning at the shrub bery beneath, we saw brand new shoots of pale green on the daphne, as if it hadn't been a cold, hard winter. Why the little shrub looks like it is ready to burst into bloom! ' About time . . . -Don't believe what the political writers say about the legislators get ting underway with their pile of work --it " isn't 'so. tnere are only three milk cans out on the window sills at the Marion hotel. Wait until the front of the building is literally cov ered with orange crates of canned milk, cheese, coke bottles, and other evidences of life, that' the real barometer of what's cookin'. . . .: Maxine Buren - - -. t t .S- Miss Joe Ann Walker, daughter of Mr. dnd Mrs. Joseph S. Walker of Grants Pass, whose engagement to Colmar D. .Pgake, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bjerke of Salem, has been "announced. No wedding date has been set (Bishop Mod erne). ' Womea's asseeiatlaa of the First Presbyterian church will hold a 12:45 o'clock board meeting and 2 'clock session oa Wednesday at the church. Mrs. Pranois Allen will sing and Mrs. Ivan Fowler will talk en her trip to Guata-mala. St Helena's Oeila ef St Faol's Episcopal church will nteet Tues day night at the hosne of Mrs. C W. Wood, 570 Judsea street at 3 'clock. Keeeat graa'aaae mt AACW will sneet Thursday night at the home ef Edward Dyck. 121 Duncan at., t 7:30 o'clock. Miss Eleanor Trin dle will give a talk oa "Furniture Arrangements.' chic lftrZ little ls SHOES Comfortob 3fe , t - k f "' . ' hi i i' - fl. '!' . V " I u J Dean Avd B. Milam, of the school of home econ omics, Oregon State col lege, who will be speaker at the luncheon meeting of the Women of Rotary at the Golden Pheasant on Monday. Dean Milan to Speak Dean Ava R Milam nt rtr-Msin State College wiU be the guest speaker ait tha Wormi nt Rnt luncheen an Monday noon at the Golden Flu int. The lunriMm t scheduled Tor 12 o'clock instead of in usual m o'clock hour. i Mrs. Ivan Stewart will speaker. Mt Aagel George Schmidt, president of Mt. Angel Business Men's club has been named local chairman of the annual March of Dimes contribution to combat polio. Convention Chairmen Named Mrs. Charles Forrette. president of the Salem Business and Profes sional Women's club, has announc ed her committee chairmen for the state convention of the BPW clubs to be held in Salem this year on May 13. 14, 15. The Salem club will serve as official hostess for the three day convention and ten tative plans have already been made. Mrs. Ruth Versteeg is conven tion chairman and other commit tees are as follows: reservations, Mrs. Betty Elofson. Mrs. Mabel Clock; housing. Mrs Ruth Moni smith and Mm Mildred Yetter; business meeting accommodations. Miss Ruth Mc Adams; music. Miss Eleanor Roberts; information. Miss Juana Holmes; registration and meal tickets. Miss Helen Hiller; hospitality. Miss Ida Mae Smith, Miss Effie Smith; publicity, Mrs. Robert M. Fischer, jr., Mrs. Mar jorie Tueski and Mrs. Effie King; scrap book. Mrs. Maude Ramseyer; pages, Mrs. Esther Little; courtesy, Mrs. Byron Herrick: convention log, Mrs. Vivian Hoenig; news paper clippings. Mrs. Daye Idle man, Mrs. Mabel Carder; finance. Miss Vada Hill; and secretary, Mrs. Hal lie Shard. Events scheduled for the con vention include: Friday. May 13, executive board ' luncheon with Mrs. William Linfott. chairman, dinner. Miss Zula Van Gilder, chairman, fun night. Miss Tillie GiUes and Mrs. Sue Booch, co chairman. Saturday, May 14, noon luncheon chairman, Mrs. Mona Yoder; formal banquet, Mrs. Mar ion Wooden and Mrs. C. W. Jor g en sen. co-chairmen. Sunday. May 15. breakfast chair man. Miss Minnie Just; executive board luncheon. Miss Phebe Mc- Adams. Dance Pupils in Demonstration Mrs. Jerome C. Lillie and Mrs. Gertrude Ayers will present their ballet and modern dance pupils in a dance demonstration on Thurs day night, January 27 at the VFW hall between 7:30 and 9 o'clock. All parents and friends of the pu pils are invited to attend and view the work done by the class in the first six months. Participating in the demonstra tion will be Susan Boring, Joanne Bourne, Jean and Ann Haworth, Diane Emigh, Larrie Lou Oster man, Kathy Heltzel, Elizabeth Wal ton, Roxanne Brown, Susan Keech, Mary Wood, Vicki Bryant. Kathy Busick, Joan Lewis, Nancy Lallie and Valerie Schuss. Legislators See Results of March of Dimes .r :-. ''4; t Detroit Alan Recovers , At Memorial Hospital DETROIT Making a satisfac tory recovery from a major ope ration is Joseph Wright. He is allowed visitors now in room 109 at the Salem Memorial hospital. Last week visiting htm were Vera Alvin. manager of the Idanha Veneer Co., Gordon Skid more, bookkeeper for the same plant, also Bill Hamilton who had been in the hospital for a tonsilectomy one day the first" of the week. He is lathe man at the veneer plant. Wright is the clipperman there. repcera .Margaret Busch of Stayton is Visiting at the George Wilsons this week. Clearance Sale ON YARN Discontinued Lines and Odd Dye Lots The KnU Shop HanUer's Balcony 190 N Liberty March ef Dimes sc rails filled oat and pasted ap with contributions from members ef the Oregon legis lature are perused ia the above photo by Elmer Church, left, Salem head of the 1949 dime campaign, and President ef the Senate William Walsh. Coos Bay, center, and Speaker ef the House Frank Van Dyke. Medferd. at right. (Statesman photo.) (KairdleriSimg Tdlay 40 WATT F LOU Rf SCENT LIGHT WITH REFLECTOR. SUSPENDED 12 INCHES A&OVE FLAT Fill flat with porous soil to with in NCHC TOP COVER. WITH LAYER OF SPHAGNUM MOSS BLOCKS TO HOLD FLAT ABOVE PAN 9M Of WATTE! GLASS FIBER! OR CLOTHES I LINE WICK I CLUB CALENDAR lATl'KDAV Salem Woman club legislatlv tea. clubhouse. 2 p. m. Salcia cnaptcr. UKt. Maunit I m- plo. t p. m. Woman's Relief Corps, covered dish luncheon. 12 o'clock. VFW hall, instal lation. 2 p.m. MONDAY Chapter AB of PBO. with Mrs. A. A. Stewert. MS North Winter street, T:4S pjn. TUESDAT Kaasera Star social .afternoon club. Chart wlr lr chapeer. aMseera Star so- eaml afternoon dub, 1.11 eeaswrt tunch- Sns of Union Veterans and auxil iary, wtth Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Ptton. S. SSth at, ae host sUnner. S:3S p.m. Dauehters of St. Elizabeth of St. Paul's Episcopal church wtth Mrs. William H. Burghardt. St Union t 1 o'clock luncheon. Salem BPW club dinner aneeting. S :30 p.m. Nohlgren's. WKD.ESOAT Nebraska club with Mrs. Ben Ran dall, lata West Nob Hill, covered etch luncheon. If- IFdDIIB CdH VIE; Hallmark Creeling Cards Regardless -pf the type or style, we are sure to have "just the thing" in our varied stock of Hall mark Greeting Cards. We invite you to come in and "browse" in our "library of greeting cards. SALEM'S EXCLUSIVE GREETING CARD STORE ' Edward IVtlliams 340 Court Street Pictured here Is Inexpensive equipment which will insure ample light and water ta home-grown seedlings and protect them from disease, Just like in grandmother's time, some light window in the house is still a good place to start plants indoors. However, improved methods, which take the "guess out of the project have been added. In oth er words grandmother's methods of sowing garden seeds In a box to grow in the kitchen window during the late winter and early frosty spring have been subject ed by experiment stations to a series of figid tests. Sometimes grandma succeeded, and some times she failed; without exactly knowing why. Science must know why. If all the protective measures which have been recommended in the last few years were applied to a single seed box here is what it would have: Automatic watering, by the wick method, to make sure the soil never dried out. A layer of sphagnum moss on top of the soil, in which the seeds were sown to prevent diseases, es pecially damping -off which can not develop in th anti-biotic moss. A lamp, preferably fluorescent, suspended a foot above the box, so it can be turned on to supple ment the daylight, whenever light I is needed. Eoaipeaeat Nat CaaUy With this equipment, none of which is expensive, any amateur gardener ought to be able to sow aeeds of flowers or vegetables in Mrs. Paal W. Sheaaard. chairman, announce that mission ary society executive board of the First Presbyterian church will meet at the home of Mrs. Charles A. Sprague Wednesday at 1:30 pm to plan its program' for the coming year. an indoor box, and bring the seedling plants up to transplant ing -size without disaster. Most important of these devi ces is probably wick watering, which is as simple as an oil lamp. A wick, preferably of fibre glass, is passed through a hole centered in the bottom of the box. The top of the wick is imbedded in the soil, the bottom drops into a pan below the box, and as long as there Is water in the pan the soil wilj he kept moist. With a large enough pan you can leave the box for days without attention. Fungi Prevented Sophagnum moss will not allow' plant fungi to develop. By spread ing a layer of moss on top of the soil, sowing, the seeds in it. and covering lightly with more moss, germination will be quick, and loss by disease nil. But the moss will not take up water from be low, and 4f wick-watering is used, it must bs watered from above until the seedlings grow roots which reach the soil. Artificial lighting is not neces sary where a south window, un shaded by outside trees or build ing, is available. But where it is not, if a fluorescent lamp is hung over the box. as indicated by the diagram, and kept lighted all night, the plants will get enough light. It will not be needed until the plants sprout. Mazda lights may be used, but they should be hung higher, . so that the night temperature of the box does not rise above 65 degrees. Gardea Calendar Jan. 27 Salem Camellia and Rhododendron society. Feb. 3 Salem branch of the American Begonia society, 8 p. m., YMCA. Qaestlera aad Answers T. D. has asked frequently when IwII., TOES.. WED. SALE! Fully Goaranleed COMPLETE WITH ATTACHMENTS 1 1 Price BUDGET TERMS Li be ray Trade-in On Your Old Cleaner V Shop in the Comfort of Your Own Home - Phone 2-5489 or Wrile for FUEL HOIIE DEI10IISTRATI0II Pt-of-Town I ustomers Vrite for ree Hpme I fmonstra- Hon ) Free Parking at Texaea Statien Car. 5th Madisea Taylor will publish hTs 'encyclo pedia again. Ans.: The'second edition of "The Garden Dictionary",, published in 1936. has been reissued as "Tay lor's Encyclopedia of Gardening" (edited by Norman Taylor. 1.225 pages. Boston: Houghton Mifflin company and the American Gar den Guild. $5.) It has been re vised, re-checked and enlarged by more than 1,000 entries. Draw ings, diagrams and maps supple ment the text. The old Taylor's has always been one of the best of its kind and the new (although somewhat more expensive, as ev erything else is) has lost nothing and gained a lot in the revision. R. H. asks how many years will the same gladioli bulbs produce blooms. Ans.: This depends on varie ties. Usually best results come from corms in ' the second and third year. One grower told me she had had good results for sev en years but this would be unus ual. G. C. asks when to spray roses with lime sulphur in winter. Ans.: In late winter but before the leaves appear. After the leaves appear start spraying with an all purpose spray and c o nt i n u e throughout the season. Mrs. Inglis Qualifies As Horticulture Judge STAYTON Mrs. Ward Inglis, member of Stayton Garden club, has been notified she passed her final judging examination with a grade of 98. Examination was giv en by National Council of Feder ated Garden clubs and qualifies the Stayton woman to judge hor ticulture, flower arrangements and landscaping. Stayton Stayton post of Ameri can Legion plans a Valentine party for February 11. Women will pre pare box luncheons to be auc tioned off. The party will be the first held in the new hall. 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