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Dr. Powell Awarded First 3 Prizes for Narcissus Seedlings Dr. Edwin C. Powell of Aspen. Md. took high honors with his narcissus "seedling" in the Thir ty-third annual narcissus show held under the auspices of the Ta koma Horticultural Club in the Takoma Park Branch Library, Fifth and Cedar streets N.W. The show closed last night. Dr. Powell won first, second and third places in the seedling class and honorable mention for his non-competitive exhibit of 64 seedlings from the Hermitage Gardens. The second best flower in the show was displayed by Mrs. John Bozievich, 6710 Hillmead road, Bethesda, who exhibited a white "Davy Schaeffer,” while third honors went to Mrs. George B. Furman. 3115 Wheaton road, Kensington, with a white "Mon ique.” The prize for best arrange ment was awarded to Mrs. A. Kyle Goodman, 9317 Carolina avenue. Silver Spring. Her ex hibit was also white narcissus in a white and blue vase. The judges were: For the col lection and specimen classes of narcissus. Judge Carey Quinn. 104 Delray street. Bethesda; arrange ments. Mrs. P. G. Nutting, 3216 Olive street N.W. Winners in Other Classes. The winners in the various classes were as follows: Collection of 25 varieties: Mrs. Furman. Mrs. Goodman, Mrs. Bozievich; 12 varieties: Willard A. King. W. H. Shaw; 6 varieties: Ellsworth Phelps. Mrs. E. Clar ence Rice, Mrs. Niels J. Hansen; six or more stems of a single va riety: Mrs. Bozievich. first and second: Mrs. E. E. Brown. Specimen classes, trumpets, va rieties with yellow lemon-colored trumpet: Mrs. Goodman, Mr. Phelps, Mrs, Bozievich; varieties with white trumpet and peri anth: Mr. King, first and second; Mrs. Bozievich. Incomparabillis. yellow shades, with or without red coloring on the cup: Mrs. Goodman, Mrs. J. E. Schrieder, Mr. King; bicolor varieties, with white or whitish perianth: Mrs. Furman, Frank 8. Pohanka, Mr. King. Barrii, yellow shades, with or without red coloring on the cup: Mr. King, first and second; Mr. Pohanka; bicolor varieties, with white or whitish perianth: Mr. Bozievich, first and second; Mrs. Furman. Takes First and Second. „ Leedsii. large varieties, cup or crown not less than one-third, but less than equal to the length of the perianth segments: Mrs. Bozievich, first and second: J. Wallace Tal ley; small varieties: Mrs. Furman, Mrs. Bozievich, second and third. Triandrus hybrids, varieties of narcissus triandrus parentage: Mrs. William S. Sharp, Mr. Po hanka, Mrs. Bozievich. Jonquilla. hybrids, varieties ob viously derived from narcissus jon quilla: Mrs. Bozievich, Mrs. Sharp, Mr. Pohanka. Tazetta and tazetta hybrids, poetaz varieties: Mrs. Furman, Mrs. George B. Watrous, jr., Miss Isabelle Smith. Poeticus varieties, poets: Mrs. Furman. Mrs. Watrous, jr., Miss Smith. Double varieties, doubles: Mr. Talley, Mrs. T. E. McCalley, Mr. King. Miscellaneous narcissus: Miss Mildred Benton, Miss Smith, Mrs. Watrous, jr., Seedlings, open to all growers: Dr. Powell, first, second, third. Special«class. other spring flow ers: Mrs. Adele Davis, Miss San defer. Novice Class Awards. Arrangement classes, novice class only: Mrs. M. L. Dieffen derfer: minature arrangement, not over three inches in any dimen sion: Miss Smith, Mrs. Clarence E. Casey, Mrs. Irene Haggerty: small arrangement of narcissus or other spring bulbs: Gerald Hag gerty, Mrs. Haggerty, Mrs. E. E. Brown; arrangement of narcissus alone or with other plant material: I Mrs. Goodman, Mrs. Joseph J.i Sazama, Mrs. Casey; arrangement| of pansies, with or without other ( plant material: Mrs. Charles Gro-J ver, Mrs. Sazama, Miss Benton; large arrangement, over 12 inches: Mrs Grover, Mrs. Dieffenderfer, Miss Smith; large arrangement, over 12 inches, of spring flowers: Miss Elizabeth Stark, Miss Smith, Mrs. Haggerty: for children under 15: Gerald Haggerty. Judge Quinn also won honor able mention for his non-competi tive "Educational Exhibit,” show ing 30 blooms of narcissus lasting from five to nine days in the open garden. Educators Will Honor W. & L. on 200th Year •y *h« Associated Press LEXINGTON. Va..-April 9. — High officials of 114 colleges and 23 learned societies will gather! here Tuesday to pay tribute to Washington and Lee University on its 200th anniversary. Among those who will bring greetings are 90 presidents of col leges and universities. Harold Willis Dodds, president of Princeton University, will de liver the convocation address on “liberal education” in Lee Chapel after the academic procession in which representatives of the W. & L. Alumni Association, the stu dent-body, national sponsors of the bicentenary, university trus tees. and the W. & L. faculty will participate. Honorary degrees will be award ed to a group of 13 distinguished American scholars after the Dodds address. Names of the re cipients will not be released un til the citations are presented. Earlier in the day post office department dfflcials will place on sale, for the first time, a commem orative postage stamp honoring the school. Assistant Postmaster General James J. Lawler will present an album of the stamps to W. & L. President Prancis P. Gaines. Ex-Quiz Kid' at G. U. Now Star Debater A former "Quiz Kid,” who stuck it out three years on the radio program of that name until he grew up and "retired.” is one of eight debaters carrying on for Georgetown University in its in tercollegiate tournament this weekend. He is John A. Lucal. 22-year-old ex-soldier and junior in the Phil odemic Debating 8ociety of the college. At 13, when he joined the "Quiz Kids” show in Septem ber, 1940, he was good at answer ing tricky questions on history and current events. Jack appeared in 68 performances, then in De cember. 1943. he had to pay the penalty for becoming 16. the age at which all "Quiz Kids” retire. A slim, blackhaired young man. Jack transferred to Georgetown last September from Harvard Uni versity because he wanted to take scholastic philosophy. He s stu dious without being a "grind.” Jack might not have been known on the campus as an ex "Quiz Kid” had not the fact just leaked out the way things like that do. He dosen't mind the occasional good natured “ribbing" because he has gone a long way and seen much since those child hood days when he was one of Joe Kelly's young charges. When Jack left the radio pro gram. he began smoking a pipe and went to Harvard. It wasn’t long, though before he spent one and a half years in the Army. All his service was in the Army of Occupation in Germany. Speak ing foreign languages is one of his strong points. He is reticent about it but he can toss around four different languages — German. Spanish. French and Chlniese. He also can handle Latin, which he sometimes uses when chatting sometimes with his Jesuit teachers. The former "Quiz Kid” hails from Oak Park, a Chicago suburb. Jack keeps up with his former colleagues on the air and follows ! their careers. Among these are Gerard Darrow, Richard Williams, Cynthia Cline and Joan Bishop, all good friends. "Cynthia married recently and Joan has made quite a singing career for herself", Jack said. Next to Federal aid for education the most discussed topic of the Georgetown University debating tournament Is, ’'Which of the 15 schools is going to win the cup?” Pondering their own chances are Midshipman Jack L. English, 23, of the U. S. Naval Academy team, who is from Pasadena, Calif, and Anne Pasternack. 21, one of George Washington University's keenest debaters. She's from Alexandria. The silver trophy will be presented in competition this evening. Jack wants to go into Gov ernment or diplomatic service At Georegtown he is taking part in campus activities. He has taken pari in 200 debates this season with the Philodemic Society. He plays the saxophone in the band, sings in the university choir and is active also in the Sodality. He has also been the regional director for the National Federation of Catholic College Students. Foreign Aid (Continued From First Page.) attacked the bill, however, as being part of what he called ‘‘a war program” comprising also huge sums for the armed forces. He said he did not oppose aid for Europe, but insisted it should be handled by the United Na tions. Instead of sponsoring the recovery program, Mr. Marcan tonio urged, "let us make an effort to bring our President and Mr. Stalin together.” j In an apparent effort to head off Mr. Smith's amendment, j which leaders predicted would be defeated soundly.' several sup porters of the "bill .pointed out reductions in actual spending under the program could be left to the Appropriations Committee, which would consider specific budget requests later. Deplores Omission of China. The legislation under discus sion merely authorizes contin uance of the program through June 30. 1650, and sets cost limits. It does not provide any 1 funds. Speaking in behalf of his pro posed $500,000,000 cut. Mr. Smith deplored omission of further aid for Nationalist China from the bill. I “Russia is engaged in a mad race to take over Asia without firing a shot,” he declared. “Then, like sitting ducks, the Philippines will fall, Japan and the islands of the Pacific and perhaps our own Alaska.” / He emphasized, however, that he favored continuance of the European aid plan. Mr. Kee pictured the program as an effective and relatively economical bulwark against “a giant octopus driving toward the sea, tentacles outstretched.” Women Indorse Measure. The United States must use all practicable means' to contain the forces of communism, he said. “Destiny has thrust our country j into a position of leadership.” j Representative Vorys, Republican, of Ohio added. "We didn’t want it. We want nothing from it. But now that it's a question of lead or die. we ll lead.” Representative Fulton, Repub lican. of Pennsylvania said he did not think the Nation is heading toward bankruptcy, nor was he i convinced war with Russia is in evitable, “because I think time is playing In our favor,” Two women members of the Foreign Affairs Committee added their indorsement of the legisla tion, which had been reported by the committee with a unanimous recommendation that it pass. Representative Helen Gahagan Douglas, Democrat, of California, said the program had been suc cessful to date and predicted, “by 1052, Europe will cease to be a patient.” Representative Frances Bolton,! Republican, of Ohio, said to halt the aid now would be akin to “pulling the rug out from under a child who is learning to walk.”: Sabath Fean Rise of Cartels. Representative Sabath, Demo-i crat, of Illinois, said he would vote; for the extension, reluctantly, be- j cause the Nation had been com mitted to it. But, he added, he feared "undeserving interests,” in cluding Wall Street elements he said were bent on rebuilding Ger man cartels, would be the chief beneficiaries. Changes in the investment guar anty provisions of the Economic Co-operation Act of 1948, proposed | in the pending'bill, were explained by Representative Ribicoff, Demo crat, of Connecticut. ; The authority which expired April 2 guaranteed the converti bility into dollars of the 'value of investments made in Europe by American businessmen under the : program to a limit of $300,000,000. Since participating countries were reluctant to make guarantees be cause they would have to be cov ered by the $300,000,000 loan fund available to them, all but $27,700. 000 of the fund was committed for loans, he said. Scheduled for Conference. The new bill, according to Mr. Ribicoff, would continue the guar antee authorization in the amount of $300,000,000, less the $27,700,000 available from the previous grant. But, he emphasized, it would be set aside as a separate contingent fund and would be available to assure investors they could get dol lars in the amount of investment capital, plus profits earned. Further, he pointed out, in vestors would be encouraged to make commitments in Europe be cause there would be, a gttewuity against loss through^ confiscation, revolution, war or government dis crimination. A Senate-House conference on differences will follow final ap proval of the House bill, which [may come before the House ad journs tomorrow. The early part of the session, however, will be given over to Dis trict matters. Rivers Tells Reserve Unit That War Is Inevitable Representative Rivers, Demo crat, of South Carolina, last night warned that the time is limited until the United States will have to go to war. Addressing the banquet session of the one-day convention of the District Department of the Re serve Officers’ Association at the Hotel Burlington, Mr. Rivers pre dicted that Russia will attack when we become weak militarily. Mr. Rivers, a member of the House Armed Services Commit tee, said that nothing short of a real, well trained military reserve force could withstand the war he believes to be inevitable. He said he is in favor of the appointment of an assistant secretary for re serves in the Defense Department. In an earlier session, the ROA elected Col. Paul S. Anderson president of the District Depart ment. He succeeds Col. Thomas H. King. The organization made preliminary plans for the 1950 national ROA convention in Wash ington. Col. Anderson said Wash ington was selected because of the planned sesquicentennial celebra tion. Some historians believe that the first American coffee house was opened in 1689 in Boston. i - - Jack A. Lucal ol Oak Park, in., one of Georgetown Uni versity’s Philodemic Society debaters, has grown-up since he aag||nfSLJa numlrous "Quls Kid**" performances in the early 40s. He’s a Junior now. —Star Staff Photos. Truman Waits Bill OK To Send Congress His Reorganization Plans By Francis f. Douglas President Truman has all the agencies of the Government work ing on a reorganization of the executive branch and will send a number of reorganization plans to Congress just as soon as the bill authorizing him to do so is adopted The President revealed this In a letter dated last Monday and made public yesterday. It was addressed to Dr. Robert L. John son. president of Temple Univer sity. Philadelphia, and Indorsed the newly-formed Citizens Com mittee on Reorganization of the Executive Branch Dr. Johnson is chairman of the committee. Hopes for Results. Mr. Truman told Dr. Johnson he hopes to accomplish some con crete results" In reorganizing the Government His letter continued "My experience with reorganiza tion has been a very disappointing one. When I first became Presi dent there were law s on the books which authorized the reorganiza tion of certain functions of the Government and I sent down a □umber of reorganization plans "Most of them were rejected by the Congress snd unletp some edu cational program 1s put on by those Interested in efficient gov ernment we shall have the aame results. "I shall send down a member of reorganization plans just as soon os the bill authorizing me to do so passes Congress and of course I shall be most happy to have all the help possible In pushing these plans through." Bill Approved by House. The bill to give the President authority to reorganize the execu tive agencies, subject to the veto of Congress, has been approv ed by the House and is pending in the Senate. | Dr. Johnson said in his letter to Mr. Truman that the Hoover Commission reports ofler the Na tion "a blueprint for lasting good Government," adding: "Your sup port of the commission and its work has encouraged many to be lieve that effective reorganization of the executive branch lies well within the bounds of possibility.” Describing the citizens' commit tee as national in scope and non ! partisan, he said it includes two jformer vice presidents, John N iGarner and Charles G. Dawes, 10 former cabinet members repre senting both political parlies, and many leaders of agriculture, busi ness, education, labor and vet erans’ and women's groups. Among the members are John W. Davis, 1924 Democratic nomi nee for President. Victor Eman uel, industrialist: Henry Ford, II.; Hanford MacNider, former na tional commander of the Ameri can Legion; Philip Murray. CIO |president; John D. Rockefeller, III; Anna Rosenberg and Les sing J, Rosen wald. MartWo Vickers to Wed Rooney After Divorce ly th« Auotiatcd Pr*u HOLLYWOOD. April 9—Mar tha Vickers, movie actress, told newsmen today she plans to go to Las Vega*. Nev„ next week to di vorce A. C. Lyles, jr.. Hollywood publicist, and then marry Mickey Rooney In June. 2,500-Year-Old Mummy Found To Contain Heart of Real Gold By the Associated Press CAIRO. April'9.—.The wife of a temple scribe who lived 2,500 years ago was buried with a heart of gold, archeologists discovered to day. The golden heart was found when they unwrapped the mummy, believed to be that of Nans-Basts, the wife of the scribe of Mempl^js whose tomb was dis covered last month. Nans-Basts’ mummy was found with nine others deep in the tombs at Sakkara, about 15 miles south of Cairo. The entrance was dis covered by Abd Essalam, young Egyptian architect, while making a study of pyramids. The open ing to the tombs. 100 feet below the ground, is near the famous step pyramid which rises like a sentinel over the ancient ceme tery o£ Memphis, once Egypt’s capital. Five coffins were opened yes terday. Dr. Drioton began un wrapping and making a more careful examination of them to day. Under the custom of the era, the heart and other vital organs were removed from the body before burial. These organs were placed in a jar and placed in the tomb with the coffin. 4821 GEORGIA AVE. R.W. TA. 3800 SALE! Curtains and Draperies Formerly $3.98, $4.98, $5.95, $6.95, $7.95 In the assortment will be found • Priscilla Curtains-pr. • Tailored Curtoins-pr. • Cottage Sets-set • Cretonne Draperies-pr. • Taffeta Draperies i-pr. • Vanity Skirts-*«• NOW All Salts Final!! * ■ Sorry, No Mail or Phono Ordort j Nans-Basts’ golden heart was described as the same size of a human heart. Its weight and value were not madek nown Im mediately. In the process of unwrapping the carefully preserved body of Ka-Nevr, or Kannufeir the scribe. Dr. Drioton first found 12 statu ettes of blue glazed pottery which are replica's of deities to preserve the dead.s They were found on the breast of Ka-Nevr. who was the scribe in the Temple of Btah Dr. Drioton expects to find more gold on Ka-Nevr. Alongside the scribe and his wife was found the mummy of their daughter. Tire archeologist was unable to determine whether she was marired. but he said she was of marriageable age. j Curiously, the archeologists found three mummies without j coffins. Tw o of these were intact Ibut the third had been crushed, j probably by rockfall. Usually ’mummies are contained In cas kets of enduring Lebanon cedar. ..._____ Saddened Throng of 5,000 Tensely Watches Rescue Work »• «*» ktwtU ' w SAN MARINO Calif . April 9 — Pi*e thousand saddened person* stand clustered around the 14 inch pipe where S year-old Kathy Fiscus Us trapped somewhere more than 75 feet below the sur face. A gaping hole. 25 feet across at the lop. runs down 75 feet alongside the pipe Into the pipe an electric drill and an electric two daring workmen bored with rotary hand saw She has been in her trap since she fell in while at play shortly before 5 pm. yesterday Grouped around the hole at the top are 100 tons of heavy equip ment — three buildoaera. three clam shell cranes two with rabies running down into the cavern two rotary well-dniltng rigs and about 15 trucks. Dangerous at Tog. “It's dangerous as hell for e'ery body standing around the top says grizzled Don Metz, a con struction engineer and friend of Kathy s family w ho is helping to boss the operation. Those at the top are uniformed policemen and sheriff deputies workmen sitting in parked trucks newspaper reporters and camera men and denim-clad firemen sit ting on heaps of hastily dug din Beyond the police ropes, and farther back beyond a wire fence are sober-faced men and womei* young and old and little boys and girls. They are tense and still, or talk in subdued tones A loud speaker carries the low. dramatic commands of the brave workmen at the bottom of the pit Their voices mingle with the weird whine of the rotary electric drill biting into the pipe Sends Call Home. • Will some officer go and cal! my wife and tell her everything ’s okay.' Homer < Whitey > Bhck says over the microphone from 75 feet down. An officer does. Then two work men's requests are immediately heeded •'Hello, topside. Bend me down a coarse two-blade " *T want a fine pinch-bar.** • Has anybody in the crowd up there got a 16-inch crescent wrench?" •'Has anybody got a five-cell flashlight?" Anything requested is promptly lowered cw line* or a ***** ******' ur:ng tap* Working »,Us M BLct is O A Kelly for 3® yea a Navy machinist now employed fey ar. Alhambra engine and *op ply firm M ft rk came to the well last night after a radio appeal for • man with expertcae® in *oft ground mnun* H til Here knot her Mete After Kathy * ruct position t» determined, a rotary water »» • drilling machine will bore another hole to a depth below her Item Una new hole tier pipr trap would be cut and Kathy removed Warmed air i* being pumped to her. a* it ha* beer, since 3 SO yesterday afternoon policemen order those at the top to stand back behind rope* about 1® fee; l:o® the hole V. Mats aay* the ground oor. su>f* of sub-so,, for the Aral 33 feet and from 3® to 99 feet down it is sand »are and gravel Below that r* cl*v he *ay* Were i.ght on top of the c.ay stutt now. Midget* few k< •> • and hu e Johnny of the radio program responded last night Mr Met. says, to radio appeals for any one small enough to be lowered into the pipe. Plan W*s Too Oinirratu 'A fellow would have to be lowered tn head first to get hold of her." he uvi and we decided it was too dangerous" Mr. Metz had planned to go to the home of Kathy s parents Ipst night for dinner when the mishap changed all their plans Mr Met* handles ihe machin ery on the drilling operation, but let Hill decide on the contour He's an old-Ume civil engineer Don Feucr. owner of a nearby drive-m sandwich stand, lias sup plied about 70 gallons of coffee 20 cases ol milk and 30 doarn doughnuts to the rescuers since last night Three Red Cross nurses tn blue uniform* sene his food, which he provides without charge Sergt. Joseph S Durante dep uty sheilff. estimate* that at least 8 000 have visited the scene since Kathy fell into the hole He said the crowd today numbers about 5.000, Twenty-five sheriff s depu ties and 50 policemen of San Ms nno and other nearby towns are controlling the orderly crowd U. N. • Continued From First Page ' Red Sea through the small Erit rean port of Assab. Britain and the United States favor giving Britain control of Cirenaica. in Eastern Libya, under a U. N. trusteeship: Italy control of Italian Somaliland under a U. N. trusteeship, and allowing Ethiopia to annex outright all of Eastern Eritrea on the Red Sea. including the big port of Massawa France favors restoring Italian control over all the colonies, ex cept for a strip of Eritrea to be given to Ethiopia. Bargain on Libya Charged. Mr. Gromyko claimed Britain and the United States had reached | “some sort of bargain” to keep I control of strategic Libya. He ac cused the three Western powers of ‘ stubbornly” deadlocking the | Big Four talks so the problem ! could be passed to the U. N. Assembly, “where they have an insured majority of the votes in their pockets.” American Delegate John Foster Dulles told newsmen after the committee session that Mr. Gro myko s charges of aggressive plans were "wholly without foundation as far as the United States was concerned. He indicated he would reply directly to Mr. Gromyko later. "I understand there are airfields ; in the area,” Mr. Dulles said. "I i hope there are. because air trans port has taken the place of rail roads and ships in this age and it needs airfields.” Mr. Dulles recalled that Rus sia s proposal for a "multiple trus teeship” over the colonies was the same as that advanced in 1945 by the United States. At that time former Soviet,Foreign Min ister V. M. Molotov turned it down. Declaring that the situation has changed very markedly since 1945. Mr. Dulles said: “At that time there did not exist the present degree of ten sion between the East and West Europe was not divided by the 79 UNDEBWOOD NO. 5 , UNDERWOOD ■ TYPEWRITERS ! • Pico type • 10" carrioge • lock spacer • Stencil cutter • Right & left margins • Margin release • Tabulator key • Shift and shift lock • 4-row, 84-charocter keyboard THIS MACHINE ONLY Tkeie^ Other Model*: That Machines Art Uttd. but it Good Operating Condition IS UWDEI WOODS ar ‘uu-xt. s34.se rtkkon-akift terrr w 42 OWDEBWOODS M*4*> M V*r» tat* (PA M tlita aaarkin* »»*•- *33’** Mata* llWalar. *K, 71 ALL T0CETKE1 u NiTivsr Hi 14th St. H.Wf KK. 1177 iron curtain. The economic de pendence of Western Europe on sources outside Europe was not as clear and imperative as it is now. There w as then no Mai - shall Plan and no proposal for the program, as embodied in President Truman s ‘fourth point to poo! technological resources to help underdeveloped areas. "All these new factors empha size the increased importance of Africa to Western Europe and the importance of political sta bility in Africa which will permit the economic development of Africa as a source of economic strength to Western Europe ' Asked to elaborate on the Amer ican reasons for opposing a gen eral trusteeship. Mr. Dulles said, ‘ The Trusteeship Council is pies ently composed of such discordant elements I doubt it would be able to bring harmony to others." Arabs Oppose Returning Tripolitania to Italy TRIPOLI. Libia. April 9 <4*>_ Arabs closed schools and sifbps here today and demonstrated as Senussi Mosque against any plan to return Tripolitania to Italy. A statement issued by store strikers who walked out for two hours asked the United Nations to hear Arab views on the future of Tripolitania, a former Italian colony now occupied by Britain The matter is now being discussed at Lake Success. Shaw Chorale W ell Keens tvi First I ime I K re I* Atn.v t»* v-t« Cb<x*. tju ■ tinruot- »** ' f> . , ha.. ..six > ^ t 15.- *. * CA r ::.ft -.r Uvf *,•;**■ * ■-? t ■'.# .ftft -ft * . * :t* ywirss .urex * . rV, ,t *■ a: \ . f .1 .* - , iite ktral v-.imr-.A* x • 4 t%t< ;f w! IV* t' i* » , ftUBBKVUx Cv r»f 1 1 • • . ■ . of the l'*i: a a u ■' f », rw- The I*-'»» *a a ,, Acted aith rr-.vf * ~ - c A1AJXK! A» f Aft : > sexeAied Me nr. » < Mr ha* . . ft t. AftltAfi A pracucaU* a , , made g:r»: dr** x ixCAiftj and .!. , 1 only s* the ensrrr.t excellent Mice* b- - * quality re*r:*» a ‘ tonal beauty than < * .*. < caw In Me :n?e- •*n And in Me eypert effect* it 1* * x ",' ’■ - 1. (ttiuni A*. ftne nu»i « »• a *»>;«> amset 1 h.' « .> ■ meet rated apparent ■ * ■ , of Bach a Cfsurv :. x » . 131 anti a Inch Ur* , -. opened Pot st * a* ;*■>*- •.-.*« • ? live sn tta presentation t • » * e 1 the worka Met foUo«e. lath t entur* sen** Drvotini the nest see: .or t s.x song* of the i#t I? n*n: » float outstanding com;xve •* Spain. Germany Eng'.a .1 t » Italy and the Nethr land* . • buoyant character of the singm* aa* established The deStcac' hi phrasing the feeling foi gt.yle * the light Cieai limb r of , • voices formed a charming ui«: Union of effect that »as ca- <*.1 out furtise; in the Biahms ' Lie bealsedei Wait rev numbeis * tc !« of opus SU These ae.e d< Ushlfuliy sung to a fooi ■ hairiest piano accompaniment and a ' keen appreciation of then chain-, mg v*s lance of mood The performance of the Km <e ■’Oleum and "Uaneluv of Po„. lenc * Mass in O major' mav g. on record as the first here It * a taxing work, taking the soprano* Into a sustained high register Jn the ’Eyrie' and through 1U dif ficult intervals calling out the full musical t eaource* of the group. Intonation impeccable Throughout the intonation **i impeccable, and Mr. Shaw under stood the rare devotional quality Uvat permeate* thus music in .spue of it* dcpar turn* from the usual ecclesiastical style It n dissonant and angutwi vet at times resolving into » Unci' har monic ending that seem- to lift up the spuit of the whole Hindemith a "Six CiiatnuiiM* were treated also with the sen*! iiveneas that marked the work of the Choiale throughout the pio g i a m The short charming Since All lx Passing and Die light quicit Lift Up Your Head*' by be taring, in the lflth century group, were excellent example* of the ensemble» elasticity in con trast to the heavier number a Three 'American Folk -anng Sketch**' bv Gad Kib.a. Meet* spirituals and e* car pi* from Rodcfis Gershwin * and Kern» xitow music completed the pro giam R wax sung a capella except for the Bach "(,'antata which was accompanied by six instrument* and piano Mr Shaw » authori tative and alert conducting act th* style of the entire performance and he was lecalied aeieial time* after each group California Resort Town Escapes Rock Avalanche tv fK* Aaaofdi•«* FOREST HOME Calif April • —Hundreds of tons of rock coated down the 10 000 foot high Ran Bernardino Mountain* today and •topped a quarter-mile from Ihta resort community There xxi no aenoua damage, except tome broken water main*. H ashmgton's Oldest and l.aigest I loor Covering Center what? still THAT'S Quaker Gtyi I ineteom lor von Mill a* lo»el> a* «*» da' it laid, after tear* of daw*. da»-o«t wear fka aarratb Quaker City • perfect combination the koeat in aattoaaJly f * Mona, fieri tel qmahtj LINOLEUM and high caliber, gaa-aa'red 1NSTAI LATION. How Will year foot U«k 3 'ear* from no- * Be »«ta it* looking it* BEST! Cell Quaker City for BEST SERVICE Tn tki* for yalue! . . . Artn»iro*g* famoo* INLAID LINOLEUM Meamlifal Mm&letttd tmilermi 10 SOUARE YARDS Laid mud Ctmrmltd /• > *■» H—t FJtEE ESTIMATESf GlaJly! Simply call ME. ItST