?3 Th CteHinm . ScUfix. Orocotv Ctmdrfy. March .13 H43 f iT(nIdy Ml i By Lfflie L. Madsen A question which every home ".. gardener should - answer before he sows a seed this spring: How many seeds should he sow for every plant he expects to grow? It is not uncommon for a bun dred seeds to be sown in space sufficient for ten . plants. This H means a crop -reduced by crowd- UIUCH UHWU WUlk J ' pended on thinning out the ex cess plants. There is good reason for sow Ing more seeds than will be al lowed to grow, but when this Is overdone there is a waste of seed and work. Seeds that germinate slowly such as carrots, parsley and par snips, should be sown more thick ly than others because the seed lings are feeble, and the force 1 kJw in -h m m s Toaite Jc ' Monday Opens C:3t P. M. Starts 7:15 P. M. Sonny Tofts Barbara Britton . -la Cineeolor "Untamed Breed" Bartoa Mac Lane -In Clneeoler Unknown Island Cartoon, News A Mat Dally from 1 P. If. NOW SHOWING! MITCHUM LOY The Red Pony f TECC" CLLG Co-IUt! Alaskan Maa-IiuntI Cent, from 1 p.m- New! Ke-Issued Turds! a. Robert Stack - Bred Crawford "Badlands of Dakota" Laurel & Hardy "Swiss Bliss" New! Cent- Shews! Tyrone Power " "Blood and Sand" Betty Grable T Wake Up Screaming of many acting together helps break the soil crust and bring the sprouts to the surface. I H. Bailey, dean of horticul tural teachers, expresses this opinion: "Thinning! is a process of selection, land the best are allowed to remain. lit is evident the chances of obtaining the best are greater when jthe gardener leaves one plant out of ten rather than one plant out or tnree. But real selection la impossible If seeds are sown So thickly the roots of the tiny plants become entangiea, ana it is impossible to remove single plants without disturbing neighbors. The thick est sowing, therefore, should al low each seed sufficient .space to develop as Individual. The surest way j with small seeds is to take a f few in hand and let them fall through the fingers Into l the j light furrow which has been prepared. Get close to the ground, and with a little practice you ) can quickly acquire control so that the seeds will be evenly distributed, each sufficiently distant from the next to prevent entanglement Keep the seeds in Una as well as you can. It helps to let the ? fad Treat! Iff fad Treat! TBMPLX T8EEAT with the All-Tune Pre-reetball Greats! Extra! COLOmCAJtTOON I Warner News .. I. -"K m 2. The Biggest Musical i 14 Stars! 32 Sengs! Bay Milland i In "Sealed: Verdict" 4 sad Distribute Seeda Evenly ta the Sow. Get Close te Che Ground garden line which was used in In makina the furrow remain in place until the seeds have been dropped. . It also helps to mix the very small seeds with . dry sand be fore rou becin to sow. using two or three times as mucn sana as seed. This spreads the seeds out better. Harden Calendar March 14 Sweet Home Gar- dan club, Lola Crenshaw, presi dent, Timberland Manor. March 14 Dayton Garden club, Mrs. Lynn Williams, presl dent. March 17 Salem Rose so- eletv. YMCA. D.m. March 18 Btayton uaraen olub. March 24 Brooks Garden club, Elva AspinwalL president QaesUons and Answers L. L. D. asks how to pronounce gladiolus plural. Ans.: IH take the liberty to quote from Sunset's garden book: "More and more gardeners have decided upon 'gladiolus' for both lingular and plural, with the ac cent on, the 'o.' Differences of opinion, however, are the spice of gardening, so if you prefer gladiolus, gladioli or even glad ioluses for the plural, stick to your guns. After all, the 1 end ing is Latinly correct, although the world often ignores this in the process of anglicizing a word; and as for the last named above, well, there is such a word as galluses!" I. H. asks how early dahlias may be planted. Ans.: As soon as all danger of frost is over. Dahlias freeze very easily and we frequently do have some rather late frosts. Some growers say they gets best results U the tubers are planted no earlier than May 20. Other plant late in April or early In May. T. S. T. Was told that straw berry weevil will injure rhodo dendrons and azaleas. Is this so, and if it is, what should one do to control? Ans.: A sprinkling of poison apple pumace, readily procurable at seed stores, placed around and beneatn the bushes, controls the adult beetles as they emerge from the ground, while; an occasional watering of rotenohe, at the rate or. one teaspoon to a gallon, dis courages the larvae. The bait may kill birds In the garden, too, and some gardeners put a fine wire netting over the ground choose one too fine for birds but not fine enough to keep out the beetles. Don't, as one gardener did last year, cover the bait closely with cheese cloth. In the primrose bed, keep about one teaspoonful around the crown, and under the leaves of each plant during the spring-summer season, replacing it each time a rain washes it away. This pest has become a real menace to our mid-Willamette gardens. Some Portland gardeners report there is little trouble with it there. We can't say the same here. Grand Island Pupil Winner In Art Work GRAND ISLAND Elwin James Mandigo, age 12, 7th grade stu dent from Grand Island school, has been notified he is one of the nine first-place winners from this state in Milton Bradley company's nation-wide "America the Beauti ful" crayon art competition for kindergarten and grade school students. James is the son of Mr. and Mrs. X. W. Mandigo of Dayton. He will receive a mounted engraved plaque. National winners, chosen from state winners in each grade, will be presented with $500 gov ernment bond scholastic fund awards. Over 60,000 drawings were entered. It is hard to say who is the more excited about James' suc cess, he or his teacher, Mrs. Beaty, under whose guidance fledgling artists from Grand Island school prepared their entries. Installation of SAE Chapter Next Week End Formal Installation of Willam ette university's chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity Is slated for next weekend with several na tional officers to be here to of ficiate. The group is now known as Phi Alpha, but will become Oregon Gamma chapter. An informal province conven tion will be held In conjunction with the installation. Meetings will be Friday ' afternoon and evening and Saturday morning and after noon. Entertainment is In charge of the chapter, headed by Charles Bowe of Coos Bay and the Salem Alumni association, of which Rob ert Brady is president. Program will include a smoker at the chap ter house Friday night, formal in stallation Saturday afternoon fol lowed by a banquet for new members and alumni, forma! dance Saturday night at chamber of commerce rooms, and Sunday afternoon an open house and tea at the chapter house with Mrs Elizabeth Higbee, housemother, as hostess. Dr. Charles E. McAllister, dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Spokane will be the principal speaker at the banquet During the banquet there will be a dinner for SAE wives and mothers at the Phi Alpha house. National officers to be here to install the chapter are G. A Ginter of Cincinnati, Ohio, nation al president; Emmett B. Moore, vice president: Lauren Foreman executive secretary, and Al Scoth. chapter supervisor, as well as Glenn T. Nygreen, province presi dent. President'' The average altitude of Spain is 2,000 feet, higher than that of any European country except Switzer land. Vet Gccd Ilanes in Silver That means something to a dis erimlnating buyer! Community Plata and 1847 Rogers ARE good names in silver and behind them stand a traditional assurance of quality. That's why P. W. HALE is proud to offer these two distinguished lines of silverware. Drop in today and look them over. You'll be pleased with the wide choice of patterns. , HOLLYWOOD JEUEIEJI rm:. i Starts Today Cant. 1:49 SCuilnn EiHuliu Aa taM lm hkmt M FcrDcnl 7rcs!u ' Tana, Stakes. Plckapa Da Year Own Ilsallng, Sava H Packing Pads and Hand Tracks Furnished. Ccslrol Scrvica Gnrcgt Cor, Ferry and Liberty Phone 2-9062 m Salem Shrine Cub Presents IN COMBINED CONCERT 1 Al Kader Chanters i (and S3 Perfectly Trained Voic Helen Louise Tios (Lyric Soprano) 1 High School Andilorinm - Salem Friday High!, Ilarch 10g 8:C3 PXL TickcU on Sale Wills Music Store or from any Shriner parodvanturs) of challenqa tha finest parformanca of its kind aver to apj5cn in concert in Salem at any time; The foremost organization of its kind in the Korthwest One hour and forty-five minutes of thrill packed entertain ment. No other concert ever offered so much that is so good for so little. The program, will be balanced for an audience that appreciates high class musical entertainment educational, spiritual, religious and humorous, blended with the finest harmony end rhythm and beautifully presented with dignity and poise, f - . Helen Louise Tims, famed lyric soprano of Portland, will be the featured vocalist with the Al Kader Shrine Chanters Fri day night, March 18. 1 ' -l :ar V ML Q. A. Glater (abeve), natleaal president of Slsma Alpha Epsl lea fraternity, and Laaren Fere maa, executive secretary, are te be here next weekend te Install the new Willamette nalveslty chapter ef the organisation. 7 Extension Courses to Start in Salem Seven new night classes for adults will begin here Monday and Wednesday sponsored by the ex tension division of the state sys tem of higher education. All will be held at Salem high school. The extension course program Includes: Monday supervision of teach ing, room 206, instructor, Dr. Rob ert B. D. Baron of Oregon College of Education; art structure III. room 205, instructor, Margaret McDevitt, Salem public schools art supervisor, both carrying three hours credit and lasting 10 weeks; elementary algebra, room 208, in structor, James Ferris Price, Ore gon State college, carrying four hours of credit Classes are from 7 to 10 pjn. I Wednesday -speech for the classroom teacher, room 214, In structor, Dr. Kenneth Scott Wood, University of Oregon; foundations of physical science, room. 2 IS in structor, Anton Postl, Oregon Col lege of Education. Each carry three hours credit and are from 7 to 10 p.m.. : Other courses include a two hour course in lower division painting, room 205 from 7 to 10 under Carl Hall of Willamette University. A ! course In advanced sight reading also will start Wed nesday in room 105 from 7 to 0 .m. under Gretchen Kr earner, Sa em public schools supervisor of music. Members of this class may elect to gain an additional hour of credit by taking choral con ducting following the regular course. Additional Information on I NOTICE OF INTKNTIOM TO IM raOVE GARNET STREET FXOM MARKET STREET TO NEBRASKA AVKNl'B Notice hereby la riven that the common council of the city ef Salem, Oregon, deems It necessary and ex pedient and hereby declares !t pur poae and Intention to Improve Garnet street from the south line of Market street to the north line of Nebraska evenue in the city of Salem. Marion county. Oregon, at the expense of the abutting and adjacent property, except the stree Intersect tons the expense of which will be assumed by the city of Salem, by bringing said portion of said street to the established grade, construct ing cement concrete curbs, and paving said i portion of said street with a 2'i-inch asphaltlc concrete pavement twenty-three feet wide. In accordance with the plans and speci fications therefor which were adopted by the common council February ZS IMS. which are now on file In the of fice of the ciiy recorder and which by this reference thereto are made a part hereof. ; The common council hereby declares Its purpose and intention to make the above described; Improvement by and through the street improvement -de partment By Order of i the Common Council February 28. IMS. ALFRED MUNDT. City Recorder Date of first j publication hereof is March t. 1M9. I M J-3-4-5--l-S-10-ll-12-ll FOR SALE j Folk Dance Club Ileobcrship Instruction one hour. Remain and dance the evening; through. Open for inspection each Friday at 9:00 p.m. A bargain C flf) i O JaUU for 0 at months Ilodern Dance Ilighl Ideal for the young; crowd. Starting: Thursday, March 17 at 8:00 p. m. Private instruction also available. Your purchase guaranteed to last a lifetime, i Located at ON FIFTY 11 VI SO.UTUfttftirY&$ ft-tll South of Stevens and Son Jewelers USE YOUR FOR YOUR CI1I X; 7 ,r: GET THE DENTAL WORK chat you need. It can be done at once and budget terms can be arranged to suit your con venience. . .you can pay by the week or month. PAINLESS PARKER Tooth are important to health Why take a chance on ruining your health (as well as your appearance) with diseased teeth? Have them repaired, so that they are sound, or extracted and re placed by a modern bridge or plate. The first thing, to do is to find out what dental work you need. No appointment is necessary, come to the office at a time most convenient to you for an examination. ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY PLATE WORK EXTRACTIONS FILLINGS CROWNS INLAYS CRIDGEW0M PLATE RCPAIKS Kinif YOU WAIT DENTAL PLATES Made with the new materials sll dentists recommend ... light in weight, natural in sppearance. They are resilient and strong, allowing you greater possibility of enjoyment of your favorite foods. 1-DAY PLATE SERVICE Yes, it is possible to get new plates in one day's time, if no extrac tions are needed. Come in before 9:30 A.M. any Saturday. week day except DRo PAINLESS PARKER Dentist 125 Liberty Street Cor Stato Telephone: Salem 3-8825 Other Painless Parker Offices In Portland and Eugene the classes maj .be obtained Jrov DoratheS Froehlich. Salem high school, phone 3-4143. This opening also coincides with the spring term opening of the Salem public schools adult educa tion program. Director George D. Porter reported that a house wives' sewing course, to Include alteration and, tailoring will open Its spring term : Mondavnlght at 7:15 o'clock. It will beheld each Monday night by Mrs. Esther M. Greer in room 101. Now' Open Kins Cole Drire-In Sundays 1 ta 11:1$ p.m. Week Dars S ta 12:3t pja. Closed Thursdays Seath Commercial at Liberty Fumift&e 7 ifliin Maria IS 7:30 p. m. Sharp ' Sale to' Be Field In the ; Spacious i lenueod Dalkcon 4 miles N. ef Salem i raetfle HUhway ft yard nerth ef i Cbemawa 4 Corners Sale consists ef new and better seal faraittire, appliances. Def lnltely ' ne Jank. Abselatcly mm reserve. Every Item mast be seld ta make, ream, far Sat. dance. I guarantee te sell every Item. Nothing wUl be set back. Including latest mode! Ad miral deluxe eiectrle range, 2 electric washers, vacaam clean er, pc. bleach dining suite. ehreme dinette set, t davene sets, 4 swing rockers, large let early American . furniture Inc. beds, chests, nite stands, vsnl ty, stirrers, ete. (factery desc ent), lancrsprlng matta. A bes springs, 89 yds. Inlaid linoleum, lino, rugs, India fibre rags. I complete bed suites, andirons. mirrors, oce. chairs, 1 antique I cherry wood chairs, bath sets. spreads, elee. clocks, toasters, waffle Irons, metal stools, cedar chest, corner cupboards, 3 Ax- minster txlt rags, I lot wool carpet f width, combination cabinet radio and auto, phono., 2 buffets, hassocks, floor at ta ble lampa, door mats, foldlnjrl steel chairs, electric table iron-1 er, apt. washer, other Iteim too numerous to list. Attend lis Sale TEEMS CAZU y ' ' " t ' , f ' ' ' Glenn Woedry, AaetloBcer Goods oa display all day Tuesday