TH& OREGON STATESMAN. SAULM. OREGON. TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 20, 1925 4. - : : . The urea on Statesman 1mm4 I&Wy Expt Moaday by TEB ITATESMAN "ILlSHINO COlfTAJTY SIS 8outh Commtreial St., Sftlem, Oreroi - ft. J. HomarUika -frad J. TM - Lm U. Marrlaiaa J. Bmith Aaarea Baara . - - Maarr - Uaaatieg-Kditor . - - t'Uy Kditor TWrapa Editor t Soelaty Ed tur W. II. llenderioa - - Cfreulatiom MnifiT Ralph li. Ktatztng - AdertUlag Hn Prank Jakakl . Manager Job Meat. Y. A. Ithotea ...... Livantock Editor W O. Conner - Poattry Mila THE ARIZONA SHERIFF Tale of hid adventures, hla rourage, hi humor, hla keen Intelll-? gnce collected by MaJor,Crover P. Sexton. "The Deputy from Yavapai County." How with nimble gun and motor far he brings swift and sum justice to evildoers. . , :- - MXMSEX OP IH ASSOCIATCD PSE8S Tea AaaaHtW Pratt U ttlaaively ntltlod to tha nta for publtat1na of an avwa lUpatekaa rradiud to it or at otaeratia credited ia taia papar and al la local a paaUakad karat. . - - : ' - - .;- HOSIVKSS OFFICES: a tear Bran. 83 W'rcMlar Bid., Portland. Ore. Tkomaa r. Clark Ce., Nw York. 128 139 W. 31t St: Cbb-ago. Vamartta Bid.: Doty Favaa. Bharoa Bid, 8ad Franrixeo. Calif.:, Higgina Bldg., Lo Aneelea. Calif, r 7 T TEI.KrH0SE8: ...... Cirenlatiaa Offina S8S Nawt Deparitnet.23 10 104 Job Drpirtmeoi . '. 6) ftatiaau tfficarI3 or SSI Caelaty EdUorJJ..-.:... : Katared a t&a Puat Offica la Salaa. Owgoa, aa aaroad-etaaa matter. December 29, 1923 SELF-MASTERY: Keep back thy servant also from presump tuous sins; let them not have domination over me; then shall I be upright, and I shall be Innocent from the great transgression." Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart be accept able of Thy sight, O Lord, my strength and my- Redeemer. " Psalm 19: 13. 14. , - SALEM'S SECOND LINEN MILL ' Work islo now go forward on Salem's second ljnen mill, and under more favorable auspices than was expected More favorable to both - the stockholders and the city, and to the flax growing and manufacturing industry as a whole ' More favorable because the primary machinery will not cost as much as was estimated, and the ownership and control will be almost entirely in Oregon hands, and largely in the hands of the people-of Salem and vicinity. ' There is a great possibility that the value of the common stock that is taken by the preferred stock holders will before long be selling at a higher price than the preferred stock And the men Who get the common stock with their purchases of, preferred stock will control the mill. Under the arrangement as now agreed upon, no one is to be given a preference in the purchase of common stock. The one-fourth of the common stock that was to have gone to the Canadian promoters of the enterprise will not be issued at all. The benefits of control and of ultimate dividends will accrue to the men who have bought or are to buy the preferred stock. There is another very favorable phase of the new situ ation in the development of this enterprise, and that is the fact that the mill as at present outlined by the directors will be one that will be capable of turning out both the coarser goods, like crashes and toweling,, and also linens of both medium and high quality, like linings and dress goods, and table cloths and napkins, etc. In other words, it will make up as part of its output, and very largely, goods that are protected from 25 to 55 per cent ad valorem And it will without doubt make profits for its stock holders, and, if kept under as prudent management as it starts dutVithr will grow- into a great institution And, more than1 this; will be the second forerunner of a gigantic flax and linen industry in Salem, destined tof become the greatest single industry in 'Oregon, for which nature prepared the Salem district to a perfection not found else where in the entire world. h Another important thing: This second linen mill, being managed and largely Owned by Salem people, will naturally be conducted in such a way as to encourage other mills; for part Of the original idea of its establishment is to develop the .industry here First; in fact, to develop the Industry, and second to make money for its stockholders. ' ,So when there is "Opportunity to run an extra shift in making yarn for a specialty, maut that will be done first tc get that additional mill, and second to make better profita for the stockholders of the original mill. Such an opportunity is Jikely to come very early in the operation of this second linen mill for Salemvfor it is known that specialty, manufacturers are already looking this way, brought to this attitude by tjhe high protective duties on all the finer manufactures of flax. tome-back for 90 days more and not pay towards the . upkeep of dur-highways,- except' what gas they buy here. It appears the editor thinks the above mention- oil cars and trucks are the only cars that are wearing our high ways. Speed is power, and that is what cuts probably one stage to 100 speeding cars. A steady drop; will wear a stone. Cut the price of the license half in two. and, raise the price of gas. thon people who operate on our highways will help keep them up. J. 1$. MILLS. JfAAitmsville. Oregon, Houve I, P.x. 49. December 24 1925... SCHOOL DAYS By DWIG A CIIICKKN ItANC'H XKAll HALKM 4. 4 . , ' . It is a wonderful outlook It was a fortunate delay. The directors are now agreed upon the program of building, and they have a vote of confidence that is unanimous from the stockholders. . There is great occasion for rejoicing. This will give a stimulus to the business of Salem "right off the bat," and it. will put a stiffening under property values here that will be seen a once. I Hit Tor Breakfast r. f ,. Now watch $alem grow - . v vv : And you will see at once evi dences of speeding up. - .-. V b ; . There were some deals being held up pendihgithe beginning of active work on the second linen mill; and no telling how many, not generally known; and ono good thing brings 'another. . i- Several men present at the noon Vneeturt- yestedray of the Salem Chamber of Commerce aaked o , Im allowed to buy some linen mill ftock at the close of the meeting Another man asked to double his , former purchase. So the thing Is , going' strong, and wilt be that way Indefinitely, , . . 'IXibeft Richard VPetJen. Salem's , most widely known. and success- . ful vrriter, haa a story In'.the cur , lentvnumber of the Saturday Eve ning Post, entitled. "Pound for Pound." It ia a sea story," and it Is written in a style tp give a very good Idea pf the ability of Jhlloso- I lihiea of 5Ir. Wetjen. ; It is a great :-i C . J ; "- i ., .. ... -rVery soon, 1t will be determined whether: the- artificially": dried' ret ried flasTat the state flax plant Is . suitable- for" spinning for. the Miles mill is trying it out. Mf found suitable, the drying" opr atlons will be extended, and there Kill be winter retting. This wuuld . . De a. tremenaous aavaiice in me industry. " S S Mr. Aid red. the man who is to supervise the putting up and run King of Salem's second linen mill examined the experimental retting and drying operations at the pen itentiary, when he was here a few days- ago. and he pronounced tbp scutched output of this fiber .as strong and suitable for. twine and thread Ho said its suitability for the making of yarns for. weaving into fine linens remained to be shown. - TWO-OrV MABEL She was a battling, two-gun woman, as desperate as any fron tiersman, was Mabl Wilson; and many a peace officer in Arizona has listened to her crackling voice, coming from a stocky-built woman of generuos proportions, with the injunction: "Drop your gun and put 'em up!" The deputy sheriff in Mohave county had the drop on hr. too. when she turned her sawed-off shotgnn in his lace and tola turn to let go the pistol and elevate his hands. He couldn't shoot a woman! They didn't know who she was, down in Yavapai county, but lhe had heard that a slim man and a big woman were smuggling in automobile loads of whiskey from northwest of the city of I'rescott, evidently from Williamson valley. So Sheriff Ed Weil, whose long- barreled 4 5 gun commands re- Kpect all over the state, took a couple of deputies in his big Stude baker car and, driving out east of the -city to disarm suspicion, cir cled around and beat it through the Sierra Prieta mountains, go ing out on Burped Ranch road. Two nights and a day they lain cut in the mountains, atop the big mesa on which Prescott is built, without sleep and almost without food. They gave up the hunt at dawn, the end or the secona ight, and carae back in for wa ter. Roads were Icy and covered with sntjw, for it was February, ana up here in the mountains it gets pret ty cold o' nights. Deputies Bill Poulson and Frank Denny were wrapped up in quilts in the back seat, while Sheriff Wet;, a stripl ing in endurance in spite of his ifty-some years, drove. Suddenly the jjreat brake:? of th car stopped it almost dead still. Pile out, yon fellows." the dep uties heard Weil shout, as they picked themselves out of the bot tom of the car to see the sheriffs long pistol coming out of its hol- Mer. Beside the road, as though drawn up for camp, was a car. and beside it a slender man and stout woman. At the sheriff's command the man put his hands up, and Well inquiredr - , "How did you folks happen to be out here in the cold?" We camped " here" ' tor tha bight," said the man, "and were just breaking camp. How far la it to Prescott?" The sheriff lowered his gun The woman started slowly toward their car. and Denny, out of cur iosity. stirred the tarpaulin on the ground with his foot. He heard a clink and, lifting it, found fefght cases of moonshine. Pcuison looked around to see George Clarke, a celebrated ne gro minstrel., on kone occasion when being examined as a witness was severely vtejrogatecfj; by" lawver - -. . ' -" . "You .are in the minstrel bus! ness. 'I believe?" inquired the lawyer; " s- Yes. sir." was the reply. ' "Is not that rather a low call ing?"- .... .. . , . "I don't know but what it is sir." replied the minstrel, fbut It is bo much better than mj father that I am proud of it. . ; The lawyer fell Into the trap. . "What was .your father's call ing?" he inquired. '. .- "He was a lawyej t-eplled what had become of the "woman. She was stepping quickly toward Iter automobile. Out came Poul son's 4 5 again as he said:' Jet away from that1 car. sis ter, arid stand up with the man you're with, or we'll be shipping your body out on the tnorning train. I Used to be an undertaker arid one dead one Tooks like an other to me." She looked at him a long time. "Make it snappy, lady, if yov pjease," added Poulson, and she saw the big hammer on his six gua starting slowly back. This was a different kind of deputy than she ever had encoun tered. She stepped back. It wat Mabel, and it was her first de feat at the hands of a peace of ficer. Ou the back cushion of her car, just inside the door, lay her own 45 revolver and sawed-off shotgun, loaded. They locked Mabel and her com panion, Albert Norton, up, and next day went back and found an additional 10 cases of contraband liquor. From seams and Vfalse pocKef in her heavy dresses she dug up fclOOO in cash as a "'bond, thn blew .out of the country, to be seen no more to this day. 'Korton began "lo couch , and appear Uj.'so. he was put downstairs, in the tem porary cells as a hospital. From there he sawed his way out through 4 windo'V and . escaped and he, too, hat never returned. "If that gun-handlin .wquan 'will just stay away, it's O. K. with us," say the deputy sheriffs - -all except" Poulson. who . stili :iiys; ''She'll conie back, and may be 111 have to1 prove yet that one dead person looks like ano'.her." BY CLADYCE HATCH After trying unsuccessfully to obtain a dozen eggs at about four different groceries, I entered a fifth and inquired hopefully: "Hive yon any fresh eggs?" . "About a dozen." "I'm very sorry, but we have only nine. You see, It is almost impossible to get a sufficient sup ply of eggs to met the demand we havo for them." So I joyfully took the nine egsfs and handed the forty-five cents, or five cents apiece for them and went on my way wondering why it was such a difficult task to ob tain a dozen, ordinary, fresh ban's eggs. I tried to penetrate the mystery and find the seemingly unknown reason for the absurd prices and scarcity of eKRs in a town like Sa lem. The next wek I wont on a tour of'inquiry around the city. I f6und that chickens very se' dom sell for less than forty cents ptr pound and that etrgs are al ways sold at a very high price. "Why U it necessary to change these exhorbitant prices?" I ask ed. "Does it cost so much to raise chickens and produce et: that they simply can not be sold cheaply?" I found that the main reison nriees are so high is that very few people have attempted to make a commercial enterprise of chicken raising. I found that green feed is to be obtained all the year and that there is also abundance of grain in the country, thereby insuring plenty of feed for the chirks. Due to the mild weather and even temperature, the open front frame houses are satisfactory, making the cost of buildina: much less than in the Mississippi valley. Plenty of green tuff and mild weather encourage the hens to lay throughout the entire year, en abling the poultry man to take ad vantage of the highest market. Because of even climatic condi tions, the incubators can be start ed in January so that there will be frys and broilers much earlier in the season than is the rule else where. The weather continues to be cool throughontt he summer so that the incubators do not have to be stopped on account of extreme heat. t The first three hundred per Leg horn hen was produced in the Wi lamette valley. There is a flock of hens near Salem containing 1 " : " " : i - ; f teeae Tvw atnT" ak j I li li I sL'.-V BOT THERE'S 'j.kM I EDITORIALS OF THE : PEOPLE Cut liirrnsr, Raise Gas Tax Kditor Statesman: I see in the Capital Journal's editorial of December 2.3, an ar ticle like thisr "Knows, No Bounds." . I see the editor is tak ing another .whack at the trucks and automobile stake operators, tb,e only twp systems oC. transpor tation we have today that can hold and are holding the railroad companies to a just and reason able price. The editor sets forth in the third paragraph what would happen to Oregon should the above mentioned bus and truck people win their contention. Does tlu editor not' admit' that the above companies are bearing the heavi est burden in the upkeep of our highways today? It appears that Ihe editor does not know that the California tourists and business men are operatinfi upon our pub lic highways under a $3 license and they can operate 00 days, then go back to California- and B rr L Z r e. fJ f & H! - - HEALTH-My Gift to You IIFE will be far i.veeter if you j once and for all time rid yourself f those anooy ing. uncomfort able and dangerous PILES and other Rectal and Colon ailments. MY FREE 96-page Book tells of my unqualified WRITTEN GUARANTEE to cure your Piles without a hospital surgical opera tion, or refund your fee. Many personal tetters are also contained therein prov ins how I have given back health and strength to thousand of others. Start the New Year Happy and Welt. Send for my Book TODAY. DCAN.MD.lnc PORTLAND OfKCtS: SEATTLE OFFICES. DutlO Or D'nn hirteen. three hundred egg hens. .Many varieties of chickens are desirable. Leghorns have always been considered excellent for any one whod esiies eggs more than meat. Plymouth Rocks are hardy and attain a good size early, since they grow quickly. Rhode Island Reds are very sood. both for egs;s and meat. The canons can always be sold at meat markets and to individuals as many prefer them to anything else. About ten acres is the most desirable amount of land to be used for commercial chicken rais ing, although a person might be gin on a smaller scale and increase the business a.s he realized more I profits. There is the City of Portland only a few miles distant, with a population of about 200.0(10, and surely most of them use eggs and eat chicken. Then there are the eastern markets, where eggs can always be shipped. No weather extremes, desirable markets and need for chickens and eggs, besides the location all help to boost Salem and the vicinity of the Willamette valley as the cen ter of the chicken raising business. SOME SUNDAY SERMONS FROM SALEM PULPITS "Sin and Its Forgiveness," Is Sermon Topic of Rev! X. K. Tulls", at the First Presbyterian Church Scholls Fred Croner raises Slfi,500 worth of walnuts on his :',00-acre orchard. Oregon will use SO. 000 barrels or oil, costing $450,000, to oil 630 I 1 miles state highway in 1926. n By DR. TI LLY How we should like to know the origin, purpose, effect and end of sin, but neither the Bible nor Jesus will let us speculate. The Bible is the most practical of all books, and Jesus is the nanest of men. Th eytell us that we are not here to pluck the heart out of every mystery but to do our work; strength sufficient is promised for that. Mere curiosity seekers find po satisfaction in the scriptures. The Bible recognizes the realty of sin, acknowledges the presence of it. points out the malignity of it, and stirs lip in the heart a pas sionate desire to get rid of it. The Bible teaches "that" sin is univer sal; it has vitiated all departments of man's being; it exists in two forms, sin of action and sin of condition; and it Is so hateful to flod that It lies under his wrath and curse. The world objects that sin is a little thing, and mocks the church lor making much ado about little. It asserts that sin is a pardonable ignorance which men will over- ome; or that is a necessity of. our ature. To all such assertious tli ; church shouts. "No." Sin Is not h trifle in view of the mountain ous masses or woe which it has caused; men do not outgrow,. it. but rather grow worse in it; and the sane-headed Shakespeare said it is the foppery of the world to pay that men sin by compulsion. Sin is a disease, an awful disease: t: load, a crushing load; j debt, an immesurable debt; a slavery, a galling intolerable slavery. It makes the head of humanity sick, f nd the whole heart faint. Only the Gospel of Christ can bring us, relief. For a great problem Christian ity offers a great remedy: "For Cod so loved the world that He gave His only .begotten. Son, that v hosoever believeth on Him' might not perish, but have eternal life." The death of Christ is the central fact of the New Tettametot. It tills the conversion of. Jesus. Paul. Peter, and- John. The; supreme voice of the New .Testament is, "Behold." the -Lamb of" God, that taketh away the-'sin of the world. ' Men and; women, 1 pleatl with you to.tnrn tHim, and Jle will teach you the .blessedness Vnf tsfaa for given. i ; lino JTMAN UIAI N i-9'T COURT MOtfIC au-MZ ShaWr Burftfvia 6TH AND PINI B rank That Are Legal W tarry In stock orer 115 legal blank' soltej to most any baslocM transactions. vVe nay have tost the form you are looking for at k big ttVing aa compared to made to order ionni, ". ' . ' 1 A Some of the forms: Contract of Sale, Road Notice,, Will forms, Assign ment of Mortgage, Mortgage forms, Quit Claim Deeds Abstracts form, Bill of Sale, Building Contract, Promissory Notes, Installment Notes, General Lease. Power of Attorney, Prune Books and Pads, Scale Re ceipts, Etc. These forms are carefully prepared for the courts and prirate use. Price on forms ranges from 4 cents to 16 cents apiece, and on note books from 25 to 50 cents. ; - ... . , Ji : PRINTED AND FQR SALE-BX The Statesman Ptiblhing Co. " i : ;:'' U'juwALiuk wsAiiciaiiSfata'-: . At Easiness Office, Gronndfljor. New Year's Edition The Oregon Statesman Friday, January 1, 1926 ; A chronicle of progress of the Salem district which you will be proud to send to your friends elsewhere. ? Ten cents a copy, postage prepaid, to any point in the ' United States. Fifteen cents a copy outside the United States. Circulation Department, Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon. Gentlemen: Enclosed find .,. ...to defray cost of mailing copied of New Years edition of The Oregon Statesman to the following addresses NAME STREET CITY - ;ISTATE . - ,. . " ' ' - : ' ' ,' : ' . , r - ; ' ';'' ' ' -. i 'X!7 '';' ' " . - ' " - . ' ' - - i ' ; ; " 1 ' i ' ' '. : 'r. - ., - ... . . l ; .. ' " - : -r- ....'y . ;. r , t i.v . V- : . ,S V,"JtW ... 1 1 I " ' . - : ... 1 .;.;. : . --- - - i . - . i . . . ' ' ... ' i . , ' 1 - - - ' :-"- . . - . , . J ; M -s " " , ... . , ; v . -. . ..... ... , - ..... 'V- ...... ,. , ' . t , . 1 f .- i ii i . 4 . r . i. ."..'.-'-.;.';. -'!! v . - K f . ' .. '...;- - : - t . . . ' " ' v ' . .r t t ' . f , . - ". , Signed L-L.; VI! ...... a. , - -' 'x .. - Address t